http://staff-www.uni-marburg.de/~schmit ... Active.zip
Ciao, troubadix

Turning off UAC is not recommended.BacKInTown wrote:I just disabled the UAC in the control pane instead, very easy! Just google for it!
I have UAC disabled from the beginning on (not per default of course) and have never had any problems adding gadgets to the sidebarXenomorph wrote:Any application that required UAC will fail (adding gadgets to the sidebar comes to mind).


...you know, once is too many timesjdhurst wrote:I disabled UAC at the beginning and never suffered any ill effects from having done that.
How do you make UAC to silently confirm?..Xenomorph wrote:
If you must mess with UAC, then change it to silently confirm operations (so it doesn't prompt you). Disabling UAC is not the answer.

short http://www.tweak-uac.com/home/bloodparrot wrote:How do you make UAC to silently confirm?..
You cannot disable Admin Approval Mode on Windows Vista Starter, Windows Vista Home Basic, or Windows Vista Home Premium because secpol.msc is not included.To disable Admin Approval Mode:
1. Click Start, click All Programs, click Accessories, click Run, type secpol.msc in the Open box, and then click OK.
2. If the User Account Control dialog box appears, confirm that the action it displays is what you want, and then click Continue..
3. From the Local Security Settings console tree, double-click Local Policies, and then double-click Security Options.
4. Scroll down and double-click User Account Control: Run all administrators in Admin Approval Mode.
5. Select the Disabled option, and then click OK.
6. Close the Local Security Settings window.
I set UAC on and in Silent mode. I worked away for a while with no issues. Then two things happened:bloodparrot wrote:<snip>
BTW JDHurst, does making shortcut need admin permission? It seems to work with UAC on and also in silent mode as well.
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