UAC stands for User Account Control. Since Vista, Microsoft's answer to 
software silently installing itself is to give any user, even administrators, a 
non-administrator "token" meaning even when you log in as an administrator you 
are not actually running as one. 

Then if you do anything that requires administrator access, you get a dialog 
that asks you if you really want to do what you are doing. This can be disabled 
in User Accounts. I don't have Windows 7 in front of my, but it's one of the 
links on the left, I believe the last one when you pull up the User Accounts 
control panel. 

Just slide the slider bar all the way down and this will disable UAC. Note, 
some people will say this is a security problem, and in a sense they are right. 
Any process launching in your profile will not automatically and silently be 
granted Administrator privileges. It's basically like Windows XP security at 
that point. 

You can disable it (which I think requires a restart not sure though) try to 
run Livecode and see if it fixes your problem. You can then reset the UAC to 
what it was later. 

Hope this helps. 

Bob


On May 23, 2011, at 10:34 AM, J Scott Saults wrote:

> Sorry, I don't know how or what you mean by disabling uac; please explain how 
> and I'll try it.
> 
> Regarding another suggestion to run in 32-bit mode, I don't know how to set 
> that  in Win7 either, but it does run OK on another PC with 64-bit Win7, and 
> on the this (Mac) computer in a  64-bit XP Parallel vm.  I have tried 
> different settings for compatibility including XP sp2, and run as 
> administrator.. So far,  adjusting the compatibility mode hasn't made any 
> difference.
> 
> I haven't received any response to my tech assistance request to RunRev.
> 
> Thanks.


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