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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | USER ACCOUNT VISTA HOME PREMIUM My sister-in-law purchased a new computer. The user accounts are messed up. At first there were two administrator accounts. This was changed to no administrator accounts. But the computer still thinks there is an administrator account and asks for a password to type in. However there is no place to type it. Therefore the user account are blocked and they do not have access to the administrator account which means they can not do too much. How can this be fixed. Is there a way to bypass the administrator password in order to turn it off and to set up a new admnistrator. They do have a disk to reload the operating system supplied by the manufacturer and this will be used at a last resort. Please help. Thanks |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: USER ACCOUNT VISTA HOME PREMIUM Wboquet There is a Built-in Administrator account that is hidden by default. This account can be used to recover from situations such as you are seeing where all of the visible administrator accounts have been either deleted or changed to Standard User accounts. Reboot the computer and when it first starts to initialize, start pressing the F8 Key until you see a black screen menu. Select the Safe Mode option, using the Arrow keys and press Enter. On the login screen, you should see the Administrator account. This account does not have a password associated with it. Click this account icon and the system should boot to Safe Mode. Be patient, safe mode can take a few minutes to load. Once the system is loaded, go to Control Panel / User Accounts. Select to "Manage another account" select one of the Standard accounts and then select to "Change the account type". Change the type to Administrator. Reboot and log on with the account you just changed. Always make sure that you have at least one administrator account configured on the computer. -- Ronnie Vernon Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User "wboquet" <wboquet@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:56E5284C-C3E0-4E3B-9DE2-3E7F8C02968E@microsoft.com... > My sister-in-law purchased a new computer. The user accounts are messed > up. > At first there were two administrator accounts. This was changed to no > administrator accounts. But the computer still thinks there is an > administrator account and asks for a password to type in. However there is > no > place to type it. Therefore the user account are blocked and they do not > have > access to the administrator account which means they can not do too much. > How can this be fixed. Is there a way to bypass the administrator password > in > order to turn it off and to set up a new admnistrator. They do have a > disk > to reload the operating system supplied by the manufacturer and this will > be > used at a last resort. Please help. Thanks |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: USER ACCOUNT VISTA HOME PREMIUM I am having the same problem with Vista home Premium. I knew for a fact that you can do this on Windows XP machine but not the case for my brothers Vista machine. I tried this safe mode attempt before i saw this page and there was no "Administrator" account, Just his own. What now? "Ronnie Vernon MVP" wrote: > Wboquet > > There is a Built-in Administrator account that is hidden by default. This > account can be used to recover from situations such as you are seeing where > all of the visible administrator accounts have been either deleted or > changed to Standard User accounts. > > Reboot the computer and when it first starts to initialize, start pressing > the F8 Key until you see a black screen menu. Select the Safe Mode option, > using the Arrow keys and press Enter. > > On the login screen, you should see the Administrator account. This account > does not have a password associated with it. Click this account icon and the > system should boot to Safe Mode. Be patient, safe mode can take a few > minutes to load. > > Once the system is loaded, go to Control Panel / User Accounts. Select to > "Manage another account" select one of the Standard accounts and then select > to "Change the account type". Change the type to Administrator. > > Reboot and log on with the account you just changed. Always make sure that > you have at least one administrator account configured on the computer. > > > > -- > > Ronnie Vernon > Microsoft MVP > Windows Shell/User > > > "wboquet" <wboquet@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:56E5284C-C3E0-4E3B-9DE2-3E7F8C02968E@microsoft.com... > > My sister-in-law purchased a new computer. The user accounts are messed > > up. > > At first there were two administrator accounts. This was changed to no > > administrator accounts. But the computer still thinks there is an > > administrator account and asks for a password to type in. However there is > > no > > place to type it. Therefore the user account are blocked and they do not > > have > > access to the administrator account which means they can not do too much. > > How can this be fixed. Is there a way to bypass the administrator password > > in > > order to turn it off and to set up a new admnistrator. They do have a > > disk > > to reload the operating system supplied by the manufacturer and this will > > be > > used at a last resort. Please help. Thanks > |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: USER ACCOUNT VISTA HOME PREMIUM "James" <James@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:15C6DB06-49B8-4314-9FEF-E24D6A263B3A@microsoft.com... >I am having the same problem with Vista home Premium. > > I knew for a fact that you can do this on Windows XP machine but not the > case for my brothers Vista machine. > I tried this safe mode attempt before i saw this page and there was no > "Administrator" account, Just his own. > > What now? > James Vista handles the Built-in Administrator account differently from what you saw in XP. In XP, anytime you boot to Safe Mode, the Built-in Administrator account is always shown on the login screen. In Vista, anytime you boot to Safe Mode, the Built-in Administrator account is only shown IF there are no other Administrator accounts on the system. What you are seeing indicates that the account shown on the Safe Mode login screen IS an Administrator account. When you login to Safe Mode with your Brothers account, go to Control Panel / User Accounts. Look at the account you are logged in with. Does it show: <account name> Administrator Password Protected Also, do you have a Vista Installation Disk? Let me know. -- Ronnie Vernon Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User |
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