Windows xp asms access denied




















I have actually found the same thing with the. Other sites seem to think this is because it is not an official CD. I think the.

Technet needs to revise its. Regards, AlexB. Tuesday, September 15, AM. Pulled my hair out for 3 days over this. Swapped out optical drive-- bingo! Proposed as answer by rdyoung Tuesday, August 17, PM. Friday, January 29, PM. Swapping the optical drive was the answer for me too. Wasn't a problem with the CD, but the CD drive. Tuesday, August 17, PM. Once Windows started it mapped the drive as D: and no longer used CdRom0. The speed of the burn did not matter, it was how the drive is addressed.

You can follow the question or vote as helpful, but you cannot reply to this thread. I have the same question 7. Report abuse. Details required :. Cancel Submit. Naman R. Hi, 1. Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site. In reply to coork's post on March 14, It never asks for that. Today I removed the hard drive and put it in another comp as a slave in hopes that I can either repair the problem or at least get important files off of it.

Can you advise me how to do it? In reply to Frustratedd's post on March 14, Type exit to quit. In reply to deleted message. Here is the Microsoft Knowledge Base article where it explains about the environment.

In reply to Savedbygrace's post on October 8, The SET command is currently disabled. Finally, a possible cause could be from corrupted operating system files due to a Virus, Trojan, Rootkit, Spyware, or other Malware infection.

You should scan your computer with all of the security applications you have installed on the computer, after updating them to the current definitions. If you don't have any anti-virus or anti-spyware programs you can use an online scanner from Trend Micro. You can keep all of your devices protected from malicious programs and online exploits by purchasing and installing Trend Micro security programs and apps.

You may think you are the Administrator, but in reality you probably aren't. If your logged-in account identity is labeled "Computer Administrator" under Users and Passwords - Account Type it is in fact a member of what is known as the "Administrators Group.

There is no account named "Administrator" on the Welcome screen! How do I access it? There are two ways to gain access to the actual "Administrator" account in both XP Home and Professional. One way is to reboot the computer into "Safe Mode," where the actual "Administrator" account will be listed on the Welcome Screen. However, some programs won't install from Safe Mode and your networking may not be fully functional Safe Mode With Networking.

Therefore, I recommend using the second method of accessing the true Administrator account - the Classic Windows Logon Screen , which will allow normal access to the Internet, with full Administrator privilges and the ability to install SP3 and run followup Windows Updates. See my extended comments for directions for displaying the Classic Windows Logon and getting into the true Administrator account.



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