Re: Getting the UAC shield off a desktop icon
Yes, the one without the shield is "Vista aware", and thusly installs
correctly in user space.
The other program, with the shield, should be installed as admin (right
click on the setup.exe, and choose run as admin.) This is giving that
program the keys to your system, but it will run with no UAC prompts.
Kurt
"S.SubZero" <ssubzero@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:195c35dc-2fd7-485f-9927-ab0b8fc22175@b5g2000pri.googlegroups.com...
> On Apr 13, 6:11 pm, "Rock" <R...@nospam.net> wrote:
>> No, UAC cannot be disabled on an individual program basis.
>>
>> --
>> Rock [MS-MVP]
>
> That is strange, since there's only two games on this install; Final
> Fantasy XI (the game in question), and the Lost Planet demo. The Lost
> Planet demo doesn't have the shield, and does not bother me for UAC
> stuff when I run it. Has this newer game somehow told Vista to trust
> it during the install?
>
> The other answers given by the other posters were not useful at all,
> as my post clearly stated I was only interested in not having this one
> particular app not bug me at every run for UAC permission. I do not
> want to disable UAC entirely, and never stated such a thing. I do
> know how to turn UAC off system-wide. I don't want to do this.