From: Charlie Russel - MVP on
Even when it does, I think you still get prompted for rights elevation.

--
Charlie.
http://msmvps.com/blogs/russel




"R. C. White" <rc(a)grandecom.net> wrote in message
news:OOCUbcnFLHA.3904(a)TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
Hi, Corsair.

I'm not familiar with CCleaner – or any “cleaner” application. But with
many apps, you can right-click on the .exe and choose Properties. On the
Compatibility tab you should find a checkbox to “Run this program as an
administrator”. I'm not sure that this setting exists or actually works for
ALL apps, but maybe it does for the one you need it for.

RC
--
R. C. White, CPA
San Marcos, TX
rc(a)grandecom.net
Microsoft Windows MVP
Windows Live Mail 2010 (15.3.2804.0607) in Win7 Ultimate x64)

"Corsair" wrote in message
news:B6DC40E8-1EFF-4A70-AB60-FBB4AC7AB47B(a)microsoft.com...

Hi Charlie,

following with the thread, I want not to be asked for "some" applications to
be auto-run, e.g. CCleaner,
I have this software (latest version) as started in the start-up, but every
time computer starts I'm asked
about running or not.

How could be done for not being asked for "some" programs, running under
account with Administrator
privileges.

Corsair

"Charlie Russel - MVP" <Charlie(a)mvKILLALLSPAMMERSps.org> escribió en el
mensaje de noticias:8D8C80B3-741A-44E1-9178-614E0908E730(a)microsoft.com...
> Windows 7 (and Vista before it) runs even administrative users as a more
> limited user most of the time, and only elevates to administrative rights
> when you actually _need_ it to do something, and only when you authorize
> it. This is by design, and is intended to protect you and your computer
> from at least some of the possible malware out there. It is possible to
> turn this off, but I strongly recommend NOT doing so. Over time you'll
> find that you rarely get prompted for elevation in the normal course of
> using the computer. But during the early days of using it, you will get
> prompted much more often, as you're installing applications, configuring
> settings, etc.
>
> Some older applications that are poorly designed will not start without
> getting administrative rights. That's just bad design, and I would urge
> you to find newer or alternative versions that don't require that
> elevation.
>
> --
> Charlie.
> http://msmvps.com/blogs/russel
>
>
> "Carmen Gauvin-O'Donnell" <seegod1(a)cogeco.ca> wrote in message
> news:11465DE6-6831-4A1D-9C3F-6D77C47B9131(a)microsoft.com...
>> ... need Administrator rights, when both profiles that I have on my
>> laptop are both set as Administrator?
>>
>> Is precisely because I have two administrator profiles and the computer
>> is "confused"?
>>
>> Any ideas, anyone? Thanks!
>>
>> C

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