Can I be the full Administrator user in Windows 7?

07
2014-07
  • Djaka

    How to completely change my Account to super user or "Administrator" in Windows 7?

    In my Control Panel, it says that my account is in the "Administrator" group, but when I type net user in the Command Prompt, my Adminu account is still on Guest mode.

    Can you help me?

  • Answers
  • Ruslan Gerasimov

    It is not the Guest Mode you are seeing, it is a list of the user names. Since you are logged in as administrator you have been already granted all privileges.


  • Related Question

    How can I duplicate a user account in Windows 7?
  • LSB

    How can I create a duplicate user account in Windows 7?

    Reason

    My account will not allow Windows Help to come up (apparently corrupted), but the Administrator account's help works fine.
    Also, when I created several "dummy" accounts, help worked on those as well.

    Or is there a way to correct help on my account?


  • Related Answers
  • Jeff Atwood

    Have you tried the Windows Easy Transfer tool in Windows 7?

    Windows Easy Transfer screenshot

    It looks promising for duplicating user account information (documents, photos, favorites, etc).

  • nhinkle

    It's not clear what you mean by a "duplicate account". Do you want to make an account with the same username? Do you want to make a new account, then restore your files to it?

    It sounds like what you need to do in this situation is create a new user account, then transfer over your documents and settings. Since your user profile itself may be corrupted, you won't want to transfer that, but you can copy over most of your application data.

    First, create a new account. Name it whatever you want, it just can't be named the same thing as any existing account. You can rename it later. Then, log off of all accounts except for the administrator account. From the administrator account, copy everything from %systemdrive%\users\old_username to %systemdrive%\users\new_username except for NTUSER.DAT, NTUSER.DAT.log and any other files like that. You may need to change your explorer settings to let you view hidden files and folders.

    Once you have copied everything over, which may take a long time if you have a lot of files, log onto the new user account, and check to see if things are working. Some settings will not have been copied over, but your bookmarks, browser addons, files, etc. should still be intact. Once you are satisfied that what you need is there, you should delete the old profile so it doesn't take up space, and then delete the old user account.

  • user317487

    For Windows 7, Microsoft explains how to duplicate a user account in response to the problem of 'fixing' a corrupted user profile here: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/fix-corrupted-user-profile#1TC=windows-7 I'm sure there are several conditions that can arise in which Windows 7 is acting 'funny' due to some data or settings becoming corrupt (or out of parameter). I experienced it personally when a friend changed a theme by changing the wallpaper image to a GIF. This caused an error in the power settings profile and caused the Start menu and context menus to abruptly close. I was not surprised when no one at Microsoft would respond to this user's predicament, but they were smart enough to solve it by creating a new account an moving over their profile data. I don't see a problem with using the same procedure to move the user account data (profile) to another computer. Windows Easy Transfer is only for transferring account information from XP or Vista to 7.