Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 22nd Oct 2009 21:53 UTC
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UAC asks you to escalate even if its something only affecting you, which is silly.
I've not had any experience with Vista, but I've been using Windows 7 for a number of months now (with the UAC slider turned all the way up) and only get prompted when installing software. Can you give an example of when it would prompt for user settings?
"UAC asks you to escalate even if its something only affecting you, which is silly.
I've not had any experience with Vista, but I've been using Windows 7 for a number of months now (with the UAC slider turned all the way up) and only get prompted when installing software. Can you give an example of when it would prompt for user settings? "
Insert random falsehood.
Bash Microsoft.
Promote competitor/free software.
Advocate one's pure objectiveness in the matter.
Profit.




Member since:
2007-02-17
That is not correct. Sudo/policykit in OSX and linux do not work like the UAC. First of all sudo on Linux is a token based system where you have super rights for a limited time and can do several superuser functions without getting prompted for the password again. Both OSX and Linux only prompt you to escalate rights when its something that will affect the system, UAC asks you to escalate even if its something only affecting you, which is silly. Also the user is still an admin on the machine meaning that UAC is only prompting the user to escalate privileges and not asking for a password to escalate privileges unless the user is not specifically set up as admin, which by default they are. UAC and sudo are not the same, there are subtle differences mostly due to culture and differences in architecture but if you've used both the differences would be very apparent.