public folder not available for all users (Vista Home Premium)

  • Thread starter Elvis Napoleon The Great
  • Start date
E

Elvis Napoleon The Great

Hi,

If I have two user accounts in Vista Home Premium PC, both having admin
rights and I place common files to public folder, should they be
readable and writable by both accounts automatically?

What could be the reason, when for example some photos are writable,
some only readable, some not visible at all in other account.

Any solutions?
 
M

Malke

Elvis said:
Hi,

If I have two user accounts in Vista Home Premium PC, both having admin
rights and I place common files to public folder, should they be
readable and writable by both accounts automatically?

What could be the reason, when for example some photos are writable,
some only readable, some not visible at all in other account.

This could happen if the permissions on the files while they are still in
your User account only allow you access. Right-click them, left-click
Properties, click on the Security tab and look at the owner and make them
Everyone. Then put them into the Public folder.

Malke
 
E

Elvis Napoleon The Great

Malke kirjoitti:
This could happen if the permissions on the files while they are still in
your User account only allow you access. Right-click them, left-click
Properties, click on the Security tab and look at the owner and make them
Everyone. Then put them into the Public folder.

Malke

They were copied from ext usb device to Public folder.
There's no owner "Everybody" in Security tab.

There's no possibility to add users to groups in Home Premium.
 
M

Malke

Elvis said:
They were copied from ext usb device to Public folder.
There's no owner "Everybody" in Security tab.

There's no possibility to add users to groups in Home Premium.

Possibly some of them were read-only or had incorrect ownership. Copy them
to your own User directory and take ownership. You can do this in all
versions of Vista.

Check the permissions of the file (or folder the file is saved in) and take
ownership:

1. Right-click the file or folder, and then click Properties.
2. Click the Security tab.
3. Under Group or user names, click your name to see the permissions you
have.

To open a file, you need to have read permission. For more information on
permissions, see What are permissions?

http://tinyurl.com/2j9vgr

Once you have the ownership straightened out, copy to the Public folder. If
all is well, you can delete the duplicates in your User directory.

Malke
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top