B
Bill SG
Using Win2K. Our customer signs in as a normal user, so we can prevent them
from accessing certain things. An application is running that we would not
want to shut down. If I now want to install something or run a program that
needs administrator rights or access a file to which the customer account
does not have access, is there any to get temporary administrator rights for
a single application. (Otherwise, I would have to log off and then on as
administrator, but that would shut off the application that should not be
stopped.) I know when access files oer a network, I am given the chance to
enter a different user and password if I don't have rights to that file. I
tried to access local files as if I was accessing them over the network, but
then it complain about the credentials conflicting with an established
account or something like that. I thought I once saw a "Run As..." feature,
but can't find it now.
TIA,
Bill
from accessing certain things. An application is running that we would not
want to shut down. If I now want to install something or run a program that
needs administrator rights or access a file to which the customer account
does not have access, is there any to get temporary administrator rights for
a single application. (Otherwise, I would have to log off and then on as
administrator, but that would shut off the application that should not be
stopped.) I know when access files oer a network, I am given the chance to
enter a different user and password if I don't have rights to that file. I
tried to access local files as if I was accessing them over the network, but
then it complain about the credentials conflicting with an established
account or something like that. I thought I once saw a "Run As..." feature,
but can't find it now.
TIA,
Bill