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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | How to make a "special" administrator in Vista? We have some users that need to be able to install printers, change date / time, and install new hardware / drivers. In XP, we found workarounds for the printer and date/time but since only administrators can install new hardware / drivers we had to relent and give local administrator accounts to these users. In Vista, it looks like standard users can install printers and change date/time, but cannot install new hardware / drivers (not that this is a bad thing, mind you). Is it possible (and if so, how) in Vista to give certain users the ability to install new hardware / drivers, but not have full administrator capabilities, or will we have to relent and give local administrator accounts to these users under Vista as well? Regards, Dave |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: How to make a "special" administrator in Vista? Hello, There's two things you can do in Windows Vista to mitigate this problem. 1) Add pre-trusted drivers to the driver store Drivers in the driver store can be installed by a standard user. http://www.vistaclues.com/driver-sta...windows-vista/ 2) Allow users to install signed drivers for certain device classes Through group policy, you can assign users the privilege to install drivers for specific classes of drivers. - Open an mmc console (click start, type mmc, press enter) - Click file -> add/remove snapin - Add group policy object editor to the list and click ok - browse to local computer policy -> Computer Configuration -> Administrative Templates -> System -> Driver Installation - Double-click "Allow non-administrators to install drivers..." - Set to enabled and click Show... - Add the GUID's of the classes of hardware you wish to allow non-admins to install To see the list of hardware class GUID's, open up the registry editor (regedit) and browse to the following location: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Class Each subkey of "class" is a GUID, and if you click on that subkey, the text in the Default value will tell you the friendly name of the class of hardware that GUID refers to. To easily copy the GUID to the clipboard, you can right-click it, click rename, right-click again and click copy, and then click off of the guid. -- - JB Microsoft MVP - Windows Shell/User Windows Vista Support Faq http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: How to make a "special" administrator in Vista? "Jimmy Brush" <JimmyBrush@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:46932CBC-C566-4F7C-B53F-61420841FEE8@microsoft.com... > Hello, > > There's two things you can do in Windows Vista to mitigate this > problem. > > 1) Add pre-trusted drivers to the driver store > > Drivers in the driver store can be installed by a standard user. > http://www.vistaclues.com/driver-sta...windows-vista/ > > 2) Allow users to install signed drivers for certain device classes > > Through group policy, you can assign users the privilege to install > drivers for specific classes of drivers. > > - Open an mmc console (click start, type mmc, press enter) > - Click file -> add/remove snapin > - Add group policy object editor to the list and click ok > - browse to local computer policy -> Computer Configuration -> > Administrative Templates -> System -> Driver Installation > - Double-click "Allow non-administrators to install drivers..." > - Set to enabled and click Show... > - Add the GUID's of the classes of hardware you wish to allow > non-admins to install > > To see the list of hardware class GUID's, open up the registry editor > (regedit) and browse to the following location: > > HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Class > > Each subkey of "class" is a GUID, and if you click on that subkey, the > text in the Default value will tell you the friendly name of the class > of hardware that GUID refers to. To easily copy the GUID to the > clipboard, you can right-click it, click rename, right-click again and > click copy, and then click off of the guid. > Thanks, I'll give that a go and see how it works for us. Just to clarify, the second method only allows signed drivers, correct? Best regards, Dave |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: How to make a "special" administrator in Vista? That's correct, signed drivers only. -- - JB Microsoft MVP - Windows Shell/User Windows Vista Support Faq http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| | Re: How to make a "special" administrator in Vista? It’s been my finding that you are either an administrator or you are not. The only thing that "prevents" anyone from doing anything as an administrator is the warning that pops up and most people ignore it and continue on. I’m afraid that you will have to give these folks full access. Maybe you can set up an administrator’s account that has a generic name and password (assuming you are on a network) and allow those persons a certain amount of time to access as an administrator and do what they have to do and when that time is up, go in and change the password. Thus, ensuring that they can only access when you are aware that they are doing so. "Dave R." wrote: > We have some users that need to be able to install printers, > change date > / time, and install new hardware / drivers. In XP, we found > workarounds > for the printer and date/time but since only administrators > can install > new hardware / drivers we had to relent and give local > administrator > accounts to these users. > > In Vista, it looks like standard users can install printers > and change > date/time, but cannot install new hardware / drivers (not that > this is a > bad thing, mind you). Is it possible (and if so, how) in > Vista to give > certain users the ability to install new hardware / drivers, > but not > have full administrator capabilities, or will we have to > relent and give > local administrator accounts to these users under Vista as > well? > > Regards, > > Dave |
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