Super Sarge
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2009
- Messages
- 170 (0.03/day)
- Location
- Jordan MN
System Name | Play Toy |
---|---|
Processor | I7 920 OC 21*166 , Voltage CPU 1.11875 Stepping is D0 |
Motherboard | ASUS P6T Deluxe V2 |
Cooling | Arctic Cooling Freezer Xtreme REV 2 |
Memory | 12 Gig Mushkin Red-Lines @1664 MHz, Timings 7 9 7 25 1 N, QPI 1.35 Dram 1.66 |
Video Card(s) | GeForce GTX 260 |
Storage | (2) 750 Seagates and (2) 1.5 Seagates All Sata 4 external HD's |
Display(s) | 24 inch Wide Screen LCD by LG |
Case | Antec 1200 |
Audio Device(s) | Sound Max on MB |
Power Supply | Thermaltake 750 |
Software | W7 Pro 64 bit |
Yes of course. And just like newtekie said, disabling UAC which takes less than a minute, lets you run any app, whether its a legal app or an app that can take you to jail for the rest of your life lol.
I used Windows XP from the time it was released until end of last year and then straight off switched to Windows 7 Ultimate and no i didnt have any issues with Windows XP and i didnt have any issues with Windows 7 either.
Those security issues are there as many business people use Win 7 Pro, Ultimate and security is there for the safety of their files. Things like UAC are there to stop unwanted programs running with out the admin's permission which could corrupt their data. And i said before, you can simply switch it off simply from a few clicks ( Click the small flag on the right hand corner => Open Action Center=> Change User Account Control Settings and drag down the bar=> Click ok)
Well said even with UAC off you get a pop up asking if you want to run the program, you can then un-check the box that says always ask