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Renaming user not reflected in Windows Explorer

Discussion in 'Windows Vista' started by BudV, Jun 5, 2009.

  1. BudV

    BudV Guest

    Vista Home Premium SP1.

    I don't know if this occurred in XP or not.

    I have renamed a user, but when I use Windows Explorer, the old user name
    shows up instead of the new one, even after a restart. What can I do to get
    consistency?
     
  2. Jon Wallace

    Jon Wallace Guest

    Hi,

    When you rename a user (i'm assuming you did this in control panel -> users)
    you are just modifying the user account, not the actual files and folders
    associated with the user.

    Let's say you have USERA. USERA also has a folder C:\USERS\USERA which is
    associated with the user account. When you rename the user account to
    USERB, USERB has a folder C:\USERS\USERA which is associated with USERB.

    Why do you want to rename the account, how much data is stored for the
    account and is just creating a new one with a different name and removing
    the old one an option?

    Cheers,
    Jon

    www.insidetheregistry.com

    ---


    "BudV" <BudVitoff@NOmsn.SPAMcom> wrote in message
    news:O2fcMtd5JHA.4672@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
    > Vista Home Premium SP1.
    >
    > I don't know if this occurred in XP or not.
    >
    > I have renamed a user, but when I use Windows Explorer, the old user name
    > shows up instead of the new one, even after a restart. What can I do to
    > get consistency?
    >
     
  3. BudV

    BudV Guest

    Thanks for the response.

    Before I answer your questions, I want to make sure that we're on the same
    wavelength here. In your example, the actual folder name hasn't changed
    (which is what I was complaining about originally). CO:USERS\USER was first
    associated with USERA, and after my change, the *same* folder is now
    associated with USERB. So everything is still kosher, but it's going to
    cause some confusion for another person looking at it. I could find out for
    myself, but as long as you're handy: can I rename the folder to
    C:\USERS\USERB to regain consistency?

    Why do I want to rename the account? It's kind of stupid, but whatever...

    I had backed up all my stuff from one account to an offline backup system.
    My PC got sick (I'll skip the details), so I erased the hard drive and
    reinstalled from scratch. I decided to be smarter about the user names I
    assigned, but I was concerned about restoring from the backup system to a
    user name that it didn't know about, so I used an old name just for
    restoring, and intended to rename it later. Of course, I found out later
    that it wasn't necessary to do that, because the backup system has a
    "Restore to ..." option. (!)

    How much data? 32GB of photos.

    If I can't rename the folder, I will probably create a new account, move the
    data, and remove the old account as you suggested.


    "Jon Wallace" <info@insidetheregistry.com> wrote in message
    news:eX8d$ge5JHA.1712@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > When you rename a user (i'm assuming you did this in control panel ->
    > users) you are just modifying the user account, not the actual files and
    > folders associated with the user.
    >
    > Let's say you have USERA. USERA also has a folder C:\USERS\USERA which is
    > associated with the user account. When you rename the user account to
    > USERB, USERB has a folder C:\USERS\USERA which is associated with USERB.
    >
    > Why do you want to rename the account, how much data is stored for the
    > account and is just creating a new one with a different name and removing
    > the old one an option?
    >
    > Cheers,
    > Jon
    >
    > www.insidetheregistry.com
    >
    > ---
    >
    >
    > "BudV" <BudVitoff@NOmsn.SPAMcom> wrote in message
    > news:O2fcMtd5JHA.4672@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
    >> Vista Home Premium SP1.
    >>
    >> I don't know if this occurred in XP or not.
    >>
    >> I have renamed a user, but when I use Windows Explorer, the old user name
    >> shows up instead of the new one, even after a restart. What can I do to
    >> get consistency?
    >>

    >
     
  4. Jon Wallace

    Jon Wallace Guest

    Hi,

    You could rename the folder, you would have to do it from another account
    because if you are logged in as the user who owns the folder things will be
    locked preventing it.

    Now the problem is that just renaming the folder doesn't fix the
    association. The folder is still associated with the user account in the
    registry so you would have to change the relevent locations in the registry
    too. If you have renamed the account, the SID (Security Identifier) will be
    the same so permissions won't be an issue, just the association.

    Honestly, IMHO the quickest thing for you to do is to create a new account
    instead of renaming the old one, log in and get a new folder and the move
    all of the stuff from the old one into the new one (documents, pictures
    etc...)

    I hope this helps,
    Jon

    www.insidetheregistry.com

    ---


    "BudV" <BudVitoff@NOmsn.SPAMcom> wrote in message
    news:OF3kQaf5JHA.4116@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
    > Thanks for the response.
    >
    > Before I answer your questions, I want to make sure that we're on the same
    > wavelength here. In your example, the actual folder name hasn't changed
    > (which is what I was complaining about originally). CO:USERS\USER was
    > first associated with USERA, and after my change, the *same* folder is now
    > associated with USERB. So everything is still kosher, but it's going to
    > cause some confusion for another person looking at it. I could find out
    > for myself, but as long as you're handy: can I rename the folder to
    > C:\USERS\USERB to regain consistency?
    >
    > Why do I want to rename the account? It's kind of stupid, but whatever...
    >
    > I had backed up all my stuff from one account to an offline backup system.
    > My PC got sick (I'll skip the details), so I erased the hard drive and
    > reinstalled from scratch. I decided to be smarter about the user names I
    > assigned, but I was concerned about restoring from the backup system to a
    > user name that it didn't know about, so I used an old name just for
    > restoring, and intended to rename it later. Of course, I found out later
    > that it wasn't necessary to do that, because the backup system has a
    > "Restore to ..." option. (!)
    >
    > How much data? 32GB of photos.
    >
    > If I can't rename the folder, I will probably create a new account, move
    > the data, and remove the old account as you suggested.
    >
    >
    > "Jon Wallace" <info@insidetheregistry.com> wrote in message
    > news:eX8d$ge5JHA.1712@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
    >>
    >> Hi,
    >>
    >> When you rename a user (i'm assuming you did this in control panel ->
    >> users) you are just modifying the user account, not the actual files and
    >> folders associated with the user.
    >>
    >> Let's say you have USERA. USERA also has a folder C:\USERS\USERA which
    >> is associated with the user account. When you rename the user account to
    >> USERB, USERB has a folder C:\USERS\USERA which is associated with USERB.
    >>
    >> Why do you want to rename the account, how much data is stored for the
    >> account and is just creating a new one with a different name and removing
    >> the old one an option?
    >>
    >> Cheers,
    >> Jon
    >>
    >> www.insidetheregistry.com
    >>
    >> ---
    >>
    >>
    >> "BudV" <BudVitoff@NOmsn.SPAMcom> wrote in message
    >> news:O2fcMtd5JHA.4672@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
    >>> Vista Home Premium SP1.
    >>>
    >>> I don't know if this occurred in XP or not.
    >>>
    >>> I have renamed a user, but when I use Windows Explorer, the old user
    >>> name shows up instead of the new one, even after a restart. What can I
    >>> do to get consistency?
    >>>

    >>

    >
    >
     
  5. "BudV" <BudVitoff@NOmsn.SPAMcom> wrote in message
    news:OF3kQaf5JHA.4116@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
    > Thanks for the response.
    >
    > Before I answer your questions, I want to make sure that we're on the same
    > wavelength here. In your example, the actual folder name hasn't changed
    > (which is what I was complaining about originally). CO:USERS\USER was
    > first associated with USERA, and after my change, the *same* folder is now
    > associated with USERB. So everything is still kosher, but it's going to
    > cause some confusion for another person looking at it. I could find out
    > for myself, but as long as you're handy: can I rename the folder to
    > C:\USERS\USERB to regain consistency?


    No. This is the way this works, and it's always worked this way.

    Windows 2000 and XP behave exactly the same way.


    > Why do I want to rename the account? It's kind of stupid, but whatever...
    >
    > I had backed up all my stuff from one account to an offline backup system.
    > My PC got sick (I'll skip the details), so I erased the hard drive and
    > reinstalled from scratch. I decided to be smarter about the user names I
    > assigned, but I was concerned about restoring from the backup system to a
    > user name that it didn't know about, so I used an old name just for
    > restoring, and intended to rename it later. Of course, I found out later
    > that it wasn't necessary to do that, because the backup system has a
    > "Restore to ..." option. (!)
    >
    > How much data? 32GB of photos.
    >
    > If I can't rename the folder, I will probably create a new account, move
    > the data, and remove the old account as you suggested.


    That's what you have to do to achieve the result you want.

    HTH
    -pk

    <snippage>
     

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