NYJimbo
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After much research and testing, I've come up with the official Foolish IT Windows 8 Live User Account Password Reset Tool.
LOL, nice.
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After much research and testing, I've come up with the official Foolish IT Windows 8 Live User Account Password Reset Tool.
Thanks guys! (Just curious, did anyone actually run the tool?)
Okay, you got me on that one, Nick. I just assumed it was on par with your other masterpieces. It's still a piece of work but the egg on my face is your canvas
Still, couldn't hurt to throw that link into there somewhere, right?
I did it is what spurred my question. Basically if your system can't get on the internet and your password is changed you are screwed.
Which also means if Microsoft gets it's accounts hacked and your password is changed you are just as screwed as there is no way to gain control of your PC until you gain control of your account.
I'll add that if someone does hijack my Google account that in no way effects my PC. I can still log on to the device and use it to try and contact Google and get my account back. If MicroShaft gets pwnd then you have to find a third party PC to try and get your life back.
Not your PC, but how about your Chromebook? Well you would at the very least need a different Google account or have to create one - (assuming you can reset a password for your Google account while being logged into a different Google account - I would guess no - but I'm not 100% on how ChromeOS keeps you logged in and handles account switching.)
You recover data and N&P. Simple and effective - more money for you as well because I'm sure you charge more for the service.
Thanks guys! (Just curious, did anyone actually run the tool?)![]()
I don't like a lot of these "features".
Integrating your system user account with your (microsofts) email system is bogus. What if you don't have internet? What if you don't have and really don't want a live account?
I like some of the ideas behind it, but overall I'd scrap the whole thing and take user accounts back to the way windows 7 did it.
If someone wanted to hack your password or remove it, they could do so but it would involve being alone with the machine long enough to boot up a utility, run it and then gain access to the machine and do whatever it is they are trying to do. Hardly worth the effort in most cases.
So if they do have a leg to stand on, it's not because this setup provides "security" measures.
It's a pain to both the customer and the IT professionals.
Note the Microsoft Account while default isn't the only way to manage users in Windows 8. You can select a local account and it behaves just like a Windows 7 local account does and if you join a domain you are given a domain logon and profile just like a Windows 7 machine. Most dumb end users of course will select the Microsoft Account in ignorance.
Wonder if your doctor, or lawyer, or accountant feels the same way about you?
Most end users do incredibly stupid things out of ignorance, laziness, or denial.
(Bolding mine)
Wonder if your doctor, or lawyer, or accountant feels the same way about you?
That aside, I read the beginning of this thread yesterday morning before work. Lo and behold, what comes in but a new laptop for data transfer. BestBuy had set up the machine, and owner had no idea of password. I sat there staring at it for a while, but no luck. I managed to sidestep the issue by having owner get the password from BestBuy.
Anyone know if NT Password changer works with WIN8?
Rick
I have not tested it but have been told it does not
If a user has forgotten their password and it's linked to a live account, could you not boot the system using the built in administrator account and reset the password for the user's account? Maybe even change it to being a local account?