Hi everyone
No, I don't usually do this(!), but I wondered why it's not possible via Windows Explorer.
I have XP Pro SP2 and have two accounts set up, in addition to the built-in hidden Administrator. One of the accounts that I've set up has Limited rights and the other has Admin rights.
I logged in with Limited rights and unchecked "Hide protected operating system files". I went to Start>Run>&%systemdrive%\recycler and it showed three icons. One was the standard Recycle Bin icon (S-1-5-21- ........ -1005) and the other two had standard Folder icons (S-1-5-21- ........ -1003 and S-1-5-21- ........ -500). I could open the -1005 icon and it showed all of the items in the Limited user's Recycle Bin, so I assume that -1005 refers to that account. I did not have access to open either of the other two icons so suspected that they refer to the Recycle Bin of the account with Admin rights and the built-in Administrator account.
I logged in with Admin rights and did the same. This time it showed three Recycle Bin icons, one for each of the S-1-5-21 ..., as above. I could open each one but they all demonstrated the contents of the Recycle Bin of the Admin account! Why is that? I expected the -1005 to show the contents of the Limited account Recycle Bin and either the -1003 or -500 to show the contents of the Admin account.
I opened a command screen and went to c:\recycler then each of the subdirectories S-1-5-21- ........ -1003, S-1-5-21- ........ -1005 and S-1-5-21- ........ -500. The contents of each were different and reflected correctly the contents of each Recycle Bin (the names were in the form Dc??.xxx, where ?? is a number and xxx is the extension, and I expected this).
Why can I see the contents of the Recycle Bin of each account correctly from the command screen (when logged in with Admin rights) but I can't when I use Windows Explorer? How can I gain access to see the contents correctly via Windows Explorer?
Apologies that this is a long post, but I know it's important to give full details, so meaningful responses can be given.
Thanks for reading!
No, I don't usually do this(!), but I wondered why it's not possible via Windows Explorer.
I have XP Pro SP2 and have two accounts set up, in addition to the built-in hidden Administrator. One of the accounts that I've set up has Limited rights and the other has Admin rights.
I logged in with Limited rights and unchecked "Hide protected operating system files". I went to Start>Run>&%systemdrive%\recycler and it showed three icons. One was the standard Recycle Bin icon (S-1-5-21- ........ -1005) and the other two had standard Folder icons (S-1-5-21- ........ -1003 and S-1-5-21- ........ -500). I could open the -1005 icon and it showed all of the items in the Limited user's Recycle Bin, so I assume that -1005 refers to that account. I did not have access to open either of the other two icons so suspected that they refer to the Recycle Bin of the account with Admin rights and the built-in Administrator account.
I logged in with Admin rights and did the same. This time it showed three Recycle Bin icons, one for each of the S-1-5-21 ..., as above. I could open each one but they all demonstrated the contents of the Recycle Bin of the Admin account! Why is that? I expected the -1005 to show the contents of the Limited account Recycle Bin and either the -1003 or -500 to show the contents of the Admin account.
I opened a command screen and went to c:\recycler then each of the subdirectories S-1-5-21- ........ -1003, S-1-5-21- ........ -1005 and S-1-5-21- ........ -500. The contents of each were different and reflected correctly the contents of each Recycle Bin (the names were in the form Dc??.xxx, where ?? is a number and xxx is the extension, and I expected this).
Why can I see the contents of the Recycle Bin of each account correctly from the command screen (when logged in with Admin rights) but I can't when I use Windows Explorer? How can I gain access to see the contents correctly via Windows Explorer?
Apologies that this is a long post, but I know it's important to give full details, so meaningful responses can be given.
Thanks for reading!