Will they dissapear on a restart? What you can do is create a shortcut on your desktop from the "command prompt" the "all programs,Accessories". If you right click on the shortcut and get the properties, go to the "Shortcut" tab and click on the "Advanced" button.
In here is a tick box so that when you use the command prompt from this shortcut it will always "run as Administrator". Thanks Johan. I was going crazy connecting to the wireless router with my new laptop which has Vista Business.
This really helped. Wonder why it has to be this way though in Vista? Does anyone have a solution to this insanity? The -p will result in persistent route; I, however need to have it set on every boot.
I really greatful,it worked ,I was so much relived with solution as I was getting the same msg when I was installing office in vista though being having office I reviewed your response to another users issue related to the error "The requested operation requires elevation" I am basically have the same issue using the "route" command, however in my case the user already has admin rights and still recieves this error.
To give you some background our desktops are set to Static IP in a Windows domain network. Our default gateway gets users Internet, network, and email access, however we have another router on the network design for access to the city mainframe network. We recently upgraded from XP to Vista. XP handled the two gateway routers without issue. Basically users could be on the Internet and the police mainframe system at the same by listing both routers as gateways, however Vista is not allowing that to happen.
That is what I wanted to try the route command. By reading your message looks like you got it to work. How can I get mine to work. Simply right-click the "Command Prompt" and choose to "Run as Administrator, does not work as it will not let you run the cmd as an admin the box is grayed out.
What is the fix for this? What did you do about this problem? To fix thie problem you need to know the root of the problem and the root is any admin related work requires admin to logged in. It will not work if you are not logged in as administrator. Please login using your administrator account right click there you will see there "Run as Administrator".
In fact if your right click over any icon or program you will see it if you are logged in as Administrator. If you want I will be happy to send you screenshot my emailid is jitku hotmail. This helped me Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Answered by:.
Archived Forums. Application Security for Windows Desktop. Sign in to vote. In XP it works fine, but when I type this in Vista: route -p add I realy need to do that, otherwise I can't access any page on wireless except Wednesday, June 14, PM.
What an easy solution, thank you Johan! If I run cmd from the Run command, the command promt is not elevated. Is it possible to Always elevate cmd?
I tryed properties but its not possible Proposed as answer by sadrul Thursday, October 15, AM. If I right-click and go to "Properties" under the "Security" tab and "Group or user name" there is a red question mark followed by a long row of numbers.
A reference to my XP existence? The other names in that box reference my current system. There are options to change permissions under "Edit" and "Advanced". I don't care about those files but I didn't want to change any settings that could negatively affect the "parent" files or program. When I created this title I got links to the Vista forums but the questions did not cover my problem. This thread is locked. You can follow the question or vote as helpful, but you cannot reply to this thread.
I have the same question That will initiate the UAC prompt for elevated privileges. If you are a member of the local administrator-group you should simply have to select continue, otherwise you need to enter the administrative password.
I am trying to install Poser 7 from a disk and I am getting this same error. A newer version of the same software. Thank you. The route is added and I get an OK! BTW, my email addy is: paul at mrpix dot co dot uk..
Depending on the way the installation is packaged, this may be a required step. A case that's not going to work is extractor. It's going to produce the error above. You can use the following line to run the cmd shell as Administrator using the run window:. So far, I can get the runas to work, but I'm running into an error stating that access is denied. Either I'm fatfingering the password, or there is some policy setting I need to tweak.
I'll let you know if I figure out what I'm doing wrong. Eric, do you work for Microsoft Because that was an incredibly MS'ish answer.
Technically correct but does nothing to answer the question. I think that in reading this thread. I still have NO idea what that error is implying.
One would assume that it's the currently logged in user account has insufficient rights to perform the requested action. However I know of no such "elevation" beyond that of Admin. If anyone looks at these forums who cares about the future of this company, Vista was a bullet to the head No it's not a learning curve issue or "I am too stupid to use Vista" as why it's disliked by the I.
It's the "Let's give less and less control as time goes on" mentality. Sure I can figure out how to do it but I am willing to bet it's a version restriction. MS support will dwindle because it will fall on Microsoft themselves and they clearly don't want that responsibility based on the 20 years of growth and placing that brunt on the HARDWARE manufacturers. My guess may be incorrect because the trail of answers says "run as administrator". If this is used in conjunction with one of the commands, the tables are cleared prior to running the command.
By default, routes are not preserved when the system is restarted. Ignored for all other commands, which always affect the appropriate persistent routes. This option is not supported in Windows MASK Specifies that the next parameter is the 'netmask' value. If not specified, it defaults to
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