Under the Vista, Ziguang Pinyin can't use the solution

  
. In actual use, I found that this method works normally most of the time, but if I have already called the purple pinyin before opening IE, it may not be able to start successfully in IE browser. Purple light pinyin. It has been said that Windows Vista does not have its own tools to view and set the integrity level of a folder. Is this really true? I was fortunate to have listened to a lecture by Robert Gu, the head of IE protection mode at Tech.Ed Beijing. I learned that Windows Vista comes with a command line tool, Icacls.exe, which can be used to view and set it up. Specifies the integrity level of the folder. Tip Robert Gu, Chief Development Officer at Microsoft Headquarters, is currently responsible for the development of IE 7 security. He is the inventor of the EFS algorithm and has led the development of EFS and PKI. He is the pride of the Chinese. Now we can make a bold guess, since there is ready-made Icacls.exe available, you can use it to set the integrity level of the purple Pinyin working directory “%Appdata%\\Unispim” to “low level" Both the IE process (lower level) and the external process (intermediate level) can access the working directory, and the purple pinyin can work normally. Just do it, then take Windows Vista RC2 Build 5744 as an example (note that the Icacls command does not work under RC1): 1. First need to add to the current account “ modify an object label & rdquo; privilege, its internal name is SeRelabelPrivilege. The method is to run secpol.msc, open the "local security policy" management unit, expand the local policy, user rights allocation in the left console tree, and navigate to the "Details of an object label" in the detailed pane on the right side. Policy item, double-click the policy item to add the current login account, as shown in the figure. 2. Log out and log back in, then run the command prompt with administrator privileges and enter the following command at the command prompt: Whoami/all find /i "SeRelabelPrivilege" The result is shown in the figure, which means that the currently logged in user already owns SeRelabelPrivilege Privileges, except that the status is disabled.



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