July 17, 20205 yr I just built my new rig and about to install Prepar3D v5. Is disabling UAC necessary anymore? ASUS ROG Maximus Hero XII ▪︎ Intel i9-10900K ▪︎ NVIDIA RTX 3090 FE ▪︎ 64GB Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro ▪︎ Windows 10 Pro (21H1) ▪︎ Samsung 970 EVO Pro 1TB NVME SSD (OS Drive) ▪︎ Samsung 860 EVO 2TB SATA SSD ▪︎ Seagate 4TB SATA HDD ▪︎ Corsair RMx 850W PSU
July 17, 20205 yr Not only that is not necessary, but you shouldn't deactivate UAC in Windows at all.
July 17, 20205 yr Author Then how come it was recommended to disable UAC before? Or have I missed something? Everytime I launch chaseplane it asks me for permission, this wasn't the case before. ASUS ROG Maximus Hero XII ▪︎ Intel i9-10900K ▪︎ NVIDIA RTX 3090 FE ▪︎ 64GB Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro ▪︎ Windows 10 Pro (21H1) ▪︎ Samsung 970 EVO Pro 1TB NVME SSD (OS Drive) ▪︎ Samsung 860 EVO 2TB SATA SSD ▪︎ Seagate 4TB SATA HDD ▪︎ Corsair RMx 850W PSU
July 17, 20205 yr Moderator I've had it disabled for years. And my new Chillblast PC professionally built also arrived with it disabled. It depends on how comfortable you are allowing executables to run without a check first. I am the only person who uses my computers and I consider myself sufficiently knowledgable not to click on links in emails etc. Ensure all shortcuts have "run as administrator" privileges. That may fix the ChasePlane problem. Ray (Cheshire, England). System: P3D v5.3HF2, Intel i9-13900K, MSI 4090 GAMING X TRIO 24G, Crucial T700 4Tb M.2 SSD, Asus ROG Maximus Z790 Hero, 32Gb Corsair Vengeance DDR5 6000Mhz RAM, Win 11 Pro 64-bit, BenQ PD3200U 32” UHD monitor, Fulcrum One yoke, Fulcrum Throttle Quadrant. Cheadle Hulme Weather website.
July 17, 20205 yr You might have disabled in the past to install Tileproxy or something like it? No real reason now for P3D or normal add ons. Edited July 17, 20205 yr by RobF2
July 17, 20205 yr That is just the reason, allowing executables to run without any kind of notice. On security standpoint, disabling UAC is irresponsible. If something doesn't work with UAC enabled, it is the developer that should look at their code, more than user having to disable UAC.
July 17, 20205 yr 1 hour ago, SimonC said: That is just the reason, allowing executables to run without any kind of notice. On security standpoint, disabling UAC is irresponsible. If something doesn't work with UAC enabled, it is the developer that should look at their code, more than user having to disable UAC. I whole heatedly agree, UAC was introduced back in 2007 with Vista, if after 13 years a developer hasn't adapted to a standard then I don't know what to say.
July 17, 20205 yr Commercial Member 3 hours ago, captain420 said: Then how come it was recommended to disable UAC before? Or have I missed something? It was only recommended in order not to have issues with very old add-ons that, not only installed "inside" the simulator own folder, but even try to *write* something there, like settings or databases that change, which is a very bad choice. Installing inside the sim wouldn't be so bad per-se ( although it can be messy and confusing ), but the real issue is when add-ons try to save something in their own folder which, if it happens to be inside the sim, and the sim happens to be installed in C:\Program Files ( which is specially protected by Windows ), UAC wouldn't allow it so, to prevent those add-ons from failing, it was usually suggested to turn off UAC. Or, alternatively, install the sim in a different place, one you should always have full permissions, something like C:\P3D, for example. Since 2006, when Vista came out, every Windows program should *never* try to write in its own installation folder, but rather use %APPDATA%\Myprogram or %LOCALAPPDATA%\Myprogram, for smaller settings and preference files, and %PROGRAMDATA%\MyProgram for larger data files that are global to the machine and not different from user to user. A program that complies with these specs will be unaffected by UAC settings, and it won't run any different regardless of the setting. But a program that doesn't, will probably require turning UAC off, or enable Adimistrator permissions explicitly for its link. Edited July 17, 20205 yr by virtuali Umberto Colapicchioni http://www.fsdreamteam.com FSDT on Facebook
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