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- #1
Using my Windows 8 laptop, I use two accounts. One is a domain standard user which I logon to the laptop with and the other is an administrative account which I only ever use in a Run-As context.
Since moving to Windows 8 about four to five months ago, I am receiving regular UAC popups requesting that I enter my administrative credentials to make changes to the network configuration.
I am connected to a stable wireless connection, so it's not a case of the connection is dropping on and off and causing something in the stack to require a restart. If I enter my credentials and accept the prompt, nothing changes, the network location, network
type all remain the same and the pop-up reappears again.
It's about once every fifteen minutes or so that this happens, but I've never timed it for sure. I have another Windows 8 machine which is a desktop, connected to a physical infrastructure and I do not get any of these same popups on that machine, so I must
assume it's linked to something wireless.
Is there a log file somewhere that tracks network events that I can use to try and determine what is causing this or is anyone else experiencing the same problems?
Thanks
Richard
Richard Green MCSE Windows Server 2003, MCTS Desktop Virtualization
View the full article
Since moving to Windows 8 about four to five months ago, I am receiving regular UAC popups requesting that I enter my administrative credentials to make changes to the network configuration.
I am connected to a stable wireless connection, so it's not a case of the connection is dropping on and off and causing something in the stack to require a restart. If I enter my credentials and accept the prompt, nothing changes, the network location, network
type all remain the same and the pop-up reappears again.
It's about once every fifteen minutes or so that this happens, but I've never timed it for sure. I have another Windows 8 machine which is a desktop, connected to a physical infrastructure and I do not get any of these same popups on that machine, so I must
assume it's linked to something wireless.
Is there a log file somewhere that tracks network events that I can use to try and determine what is causing this or is anyone else experiencing the same problems?
Thanks
Richard
Richard Green MCSE Windows Server 2003, MCTS Desktop Virtualization
View the full article