I'm afraid it hasn't done anything for me. I managed to get it to run but it only removed my patched DLLs for custom themes.
I can't think of why this would be happening. If anybody has any idea where the icons are contained for the 32-bit shell, I will replace that file with one from the disc...
sfc had reported that there were files that were unable to be repaired.
Here is the log file for that, which does not seem to say anything about which files were not able to be repaired:
2013-04-20 04:16:22, Info CBS TI: --- Initializing Trusted Installer ---
2013-04-20...
Similar to the issue wherein icons no longer load properly for Explorer, but this isn't happening in 64-bit Explorer.
So far I have only seen that 32-bit applications that require saving files or loading files will not show the icons in the dialog. 64-bit Paint.NET and 64-bit TeamSpeak 3 does...
Sorry to necro this thread.
Using the EnableLUA tweak does in fact achieve the desired result, restoring Windows 7 and beforehand permission functionality across the shell with Administrator-level accounts that aren't the Administrator account.
But we can no longer launch the Windows 8...
I would have used System Restore but I had it turned off.
I don't know what that command has done for me. It hasn't restored the system permissions.
Edit: Fresh installed. Was time to, anyway.
Hi, Windows Eight Forums!
I accidentally my entire permissions on my C:/ drive, and now my OS is acting faulty... managing to get ownership over the drive, I am now in a position to start putting them back the way they should be.
Could somebody tell me what their default, unmodified...
If I swap to one of the high contrast themes Windows does act like it has turned off the advanced visual styles, including offering more UI customizations options that were normally available when you swapped to classic themes in Windows 7 or Windows Vista.
My user account is a member of the Administrators group.
It does look like the Administrators group has some special permission setup — there is write permissions, but it's set up as special permissions. Oddly enough, I can't seem to find an instance that would show I shouldn't be able to write...
This is not a solution for me as this file is used to automate a process on client computers.
The administrator passwords will not be consistent.
I don't know what you're referring to with EXE files.
The batch file is written to copy two files in to C:\Windows\, and they weren't copied...
I had expected as much.
Running an elevated command prompt to launch the batch file manually by relocating to its directory in the following manner
allows for the file to execute and copy the files smoothly, but if I right click the batch file and 'Run as Administrator', it doesn't do anything...