Please report only one bug per message!
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siealex
Senior Member
Posts: 304 Joined: 2009-03-22, 16:36 UTC
Post
by *siealex » 2013-04-18, 09:29 UTC
Downgrade to WinXP and you will have no problems.
We are not so S.M.A.R.T. as we imagine...
MVV
Power Member
Posts: 8711 Joined: 2008-08-03, 12:51 UTC
Location: Russian Federation
Post
by *MVV » 2013-04-18, 10:54 UTC
siealex ,
There is a much easier solution: disable UAC . But it is a bad solution.
MarcinW
Power Member
Posts: 852 Joined: 2012-01-23, 15:58 UTC
Location: Poland
Post
by *MarcinW » 2013-04-18, 22:49 UTC
@ghisler(Author) : maybe it's possible to register window as IDropTarget and _also_ with DragAcceptFiles function? Maybe this could allow to drop at least normal files for elevated TC?
ghisler(Author)
Site Admin
Posts: 50386 Joined: 2003-02-04, 09:46 UTC
Location: Switzerland
Contact:
Post
by *ghisler(Author) » 2013-04-22, 15:15 UTC
That doesn't seem to work: I called DragAcceptFiles(handle,true) for TC itself and for its file panels, but the cursor remained "forbidden" when dragging from lower to higher level instance. I can drag files from elevated to TC to non-elevated already in older versions, though.
MarcinW
Power Member
Posts: 852 Joined: 2012-01-23, 15:58 UTC
Location: Poland
Post
by *MarcinW » 2013-04-23, 15:03 UTC
So it seems that there is definitely no way to drag objects from non-elevated Explorer to elevated TC :-/
Horst.Epp
Power Member
Posts: 6950 Joined: 2003-02-06, 17:36 UTC
Location: Germany
Post
by *Horst.Epp » 2013-04-23, 16:10 UTC
MarcinW wrote: So it seems that there is definitely no way to drag objects from non-elevated Explorer to elevated TC :-/
And that is fine because it would be a security risk.
It was one of the better ideas from Microsoft to prevent this.
MarcinW
Power Member
Posts: 852 Joined: 2012-01-23, 15:58 UTC
Location: Poland
Post
by *MarcinW » 2013-04-23, 16:20 UTC
Yes, you are right, this would be a security hole.