R
Robert
I've seen this problem covered but never seen an answer to
the question, "Why is my User Accounts dialog missing
the "Advanced" tab?"
The answer given is always to use:
"Start/Run 'control userpasswords2'"
This brings up the desired dialog box, but that wasn't
really the question.
I want to know why when I click on the control panel
line "User Accounts", I get a different dialog than
certain of my co-workers, who get the full Win2k-style
dialog, not the "friendly" one. Or more pragmatically, I
would like to know how to modify my setup so that I get
the old Win2K-style "unfriendly" interface.
I dislike the new "friendly" interfaces and am trying to
remove them all from my experience. Thus I want to get
rid of this "User Accounts" one.
My only clue at the moment is that I"m not logging into a
domain, while my co-workers do. Could that be the
distinction? If so, is there any way to get the domain-
style behavior without loggin into a domain?
the question, "Why is my User Accounts dialog missing
the "Advanced" tab?"
The answer given is always to use:
"Start/Run 'control userpasswords2'"
This brings up the desired dialog box, but that wasn't
really the question.
I want to know why when I click on the control panel
line "User Accounts", I get a different dialog than
certain of my co-workers, who get the full Win2k-style
dialog, not the "friendly" one. Or more pragmatically, I
would like to know how to modify my setup so that I get
the old Win2K-style "unfriendly" interface.
I dislike the new "friendly" interfaces and am trying to
remove them all from my experience. Thus I want to get
rid of this "User Accounts" one.
My only clue at the moment is that I"m not logging into a
domain, while my co-workers do. Could that be the
distinction? If so, is there any way to get the domain-
style behavior without loggin into a domain?