ryoko 0 Posted July 30, 2000 I am trying to set up NT Workstations so that the user can have the rights to modify anything on the local machine (install apps, edit registry, change drivers,etc.) like an administrator can. I do not want them to have admin rights on the network. Unless they log into the local machine as opposed to logging into the domain, I have not been able to implement this. Any ideas? Thanks in advance. Share this post Link to post
gramaglia 0 Posted July 31, 2000 I had the same problem, I wanted some users to be able to burn CD's using Nero.... but for using Nero you must have administrator's rights, and that means logging as an admin! I have found no other mean to burn CD's under a user account than to use another burning program.... I don't know if the "Power User" has network capabilities, and, more important, their entity....probably you could investigate this. As for reducing the "power" of Local administrators, you have no way. They're Admins, Full Stop. Share this post Link to post
nagual 0 Posted July 31, 2000 usrmgr.exe (usermanager for domains) click, select domain - type in the host name of the machine - add the user to the administrators group..thatll make em member of the LOCAL admin group Share this post Link to post
ryoko 0 Posted August 1, 2000 I have tried something like that. I made them an admin on the local machine, and instead of logging into the domain they log into the local machine. if their password and username are the same, they can access the network resources as users but the local machine as "local admins". the problem is the network login script does not run in this manner. I had to set a script on each individual machine to run and access the system's loginscrips. I really do not like this solution, but it seems like the only way to accomplish what I need. Thank you anyway for the help. Share this post Link to post
PSM450 0 Posted August 28, 2000 Hi What you need to do is log onto the workstation as the domain administrator or the Workstaion administrator, start user manager on the workstation, add the domain member who will be using the Workstation to the local administrator group. This will give the user adminstrative rights to the workstation but not to the domain controllers. ------------------ PSM450 Brainbench ‘MVP’ for WinNT Workstation http://www.brainbench.com Share this post Link to post
PSM450 0 Posted August 28, 2000 Oops, double post. ------------------ PSM450 Brainbench ‘MVP’ for WinNT Workstation http://www.brainbench.com [This message has been edited by PSM450 (edited 28 August 2000).] Share this post Link to post