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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | User Account Control and exceptions? Could anyone advise on the following problem? I'm using Vista Home Premium with a Netgear WG111 wireless adapter. The adapter loads a program on startup - a "wireless assistant" program - which triggers the User Account Control access box. Unless I manually allow the program to run on startup it doesn't run. It isn't always feasible for me to do this and so I have had to disable User Account Control. Is there a way for me to allow the Netgear wireless assistant program to run as an exception - in other words to use User Account Control without the wireless assistant triggering the alert? Gareth. |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: User Account Control and exceptions? In general, there is no way to make UAC exceptions for an individual program or service. Have you looked at Netgears web site for updated software and drivers? "Gareth" <hotmail.com@dgareth_nospam.com> wrote in message news:46b0d60f$0$31730$db0fefd9@news.zen.co.uk... > Could anyone advise on the following problem? > > I'm using Vista Home Premium with a Netgear WG111 wireless adapter. The > adapter loads a program on startup - a "wireless assistant" program - > which triggers the User Account Control access box. Unless I manually > allow the program to run on startup it doesn't run. It isn't always > feasible for me to do this and so I have had to disable User Account > Control. > > Is there a way for me to allow the Netgear wireless assistant program to > run as an exception - in other words to use User Account Control without > the wireless assistant triggering the alert? > > Gareth. |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: User Account Control and exceptions? You might try this. Be sure the Netgear program has Admin rights. I think you can do that in the Compatibility tab of Properties. Next, run gpedit.msc and hope you have the ability to edit group policies... some Vista flavors don't. Navigate to Computer Config--Windows Settings--Security Settings--Local Policies--Security Options. At the bottom of the list you'll see the User Account Control list. Find the elevate for Administrators and change its setting from Prompt to Elevate without prompt. I assume you are in the administrators group or this won't help. If a standard user, do the same in the line below the elevate admin line in the UAC list. Hope that fixes your problem. And remember where these UAC settings ar because that change often gets unchanged by Vista for no good reason. In gpedit "Gareth" <hotmail.com@dgareth_nospam.com> wrote in message news:46b0d60f$0$31730$db0fefd9@news.zen.co.uk... > Could anyone advise on the following problem? > > I'm using Vista Home Premium with a Netgear WG111 wireless adapter. The > adapter loads a program on startup - a "wireless assistant" program - > which triggers the User Account Control access box. Unless I manually > allow the program to run on startup it doesn't run. It isn't always > feasible for me to do this and so I have had to disable User Account > Control. > > Is there a way for me to allow the Netgear wireless assistant program to > run as an exception - in other words to use User Account Control without > the wireless assistant triggering the alert? > > Gareth. |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: User Account Control and exceptions? "John" <me@myhome.net> wrote in message news:OKjtJLU1HHA.6128@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl... > You might try this. Be sure the Netgear program has Admin rights. I think > you can do that in the Compatibility tab of Properties. > Next, run gpedit.msc and hope you have the ability to edit group > policies... some Vista flavors don't. Navigate to Computer Config--Windows > Settings--Security Settings--Local Policies--Security Options. At the > bottom of the list you'll see the User Account Control list. Find the > elevate for Administrators and change its setting from Prompt to Elevate > without prompt. I assume you are in the administrators group or this won't > help. If a standard user, do the same in the line below the elevate admin > line in the UAC list. Hope that fixes your problem. And remember where > these UAC settings ar because that change often gets unchanged by Vista > for no good reason. Thanks John. No, the Admin rights box is greyed out in the compatibility tab and I don't have gpedit (Vista Home Premium). It's odd that MS didn't factor in the need for legacy type drivers in providing an easy exception method for User Access Control although I suppose that this would then have compromised the whole concept of User Access Control. This Netgear driver isn't actually a legacy driver either - it is Vista compatible but as far as I can tell it is basically an update of a XP driver. I guess I'm stuck. Gareth. |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| | Re: User Account Control and exceptions? "GTS" <x@y.net> wrote in message news:OBLVWaI1HHA.4824@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl... > In general, there is no way to make UAC exceptions for an individual > program or service. Have you looked at Netgears web site for updated > software and drivers? Thanks. Yes I'm using the latest driver which claims to be Vista compatible but just seems to be a minor tweak to an older driver. Netgear's Vista support is by the looks of it very poor - they ditched early products by refusing to provide Vista drives (legacy products only by a very liberal definition of the word) and it seems that even their Vista compatible products don't fare much better. Gareth. |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| | Re: User Account Control and exceptions? Gareth wrote: > Could anyone advise on the following problem? > > I'm using Vista Home Premium with a Netgear WG111 wireless adapter. The > adapter loads a program on startup - a "wireless assistant" program - > which triggers the User Account Control access box. Unless I manually > allow the program to run on startup it doesn't run. It isn't always > feasible for me to do this and so I have had to disable User Account > Control. > > Is there a way for me to allow the Netgear wireless assistant program to > run as an exception - in other words to use User Account Control without > the wireless assistant triggering the alert? > > Gareth. Hello, You can have the program start under your user account via the task scheduler. When creating the task, put a check next to run with highest privilege. This will allow the program to start with admin power and without prompting whenever the task is triggered. I made a tool that automates this under some scenarios: http://www.jimmah.com/vista/Administ...n_program.aspx Note that you cannot cause a program to run with admin power on a non-admin's desktop when they log on. - JB |
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