Skip to main content
Commonmark migration
Source Link

Take from an answer to a similar question:

For all apps with requestedPrivilegeLevel="highestLevel" in their manifest, you can use Microsoft's Application Compatibility Toolkit to shim the application with the RunAsInvoker fix, which forces the app to run with your standard user tokens.

 

For more information on how to use the Application Compatibility Toolkit ...(snip)... general instructions.

Take from an answer to a similar question:

For all apps with requestedPrivilegeLevel="highestLevel" in their manifest, you can use Microsoft's Application Compatibility Toolkit to shim the application with the RunAsInvoker fix, which forces the app to run with your standard user tokens.

 

For more information on how to use the Application Compatibility Toolkit ...(snip)... general instructions.

Take from an answer to a similar question:

For all apps with requestedPrivilegeLevel="highestLevel" in their manifest, you can use Microsoft's Application Compatibility Toolkit to shim the application with the RunAsInvoker fix, which forces the app to run with your standard user tokens.

For more information on how to use the Application Compatibility Toolkit ...(snip)... general instructions.

replaced http://superuser.com/ with https://superuser.com/
Source Link

Take from an answeranswer to a similar question:

For all apps with requestedPrivilegeLevel="highestLevel" in their manifest, you can use Microsoft's Application Compatibility Toolkit to shim the application with the RunAsInvoker fix, which forces the app to run with your standard user tokens.

For more information on how to use the Application Compatibility Toolkit ...(snip)... general instructions.

Take from an answer to a similar question:

For all apps with requestedPrivilegeLevel="highestLevel" in their manifest, you can use Microsoft's Application Compatibility Toolkit to shim the application with the RunAsInvoker fix, which forces the app to run with your standard user tokens.

For more information on how to use the Application Compatibility Toolkit ...(snip)... general instructions.

Take from an answer to a similar question:

For all apps with requestedPrivilegeLevel="highestLevel" in their manifest, you can use Microsoft's Application Compatibility Toolkit to shim the application with the RunAsInvoker fix, which forces the app to run with your standard user tokens.

For more information on how to use the Application Compatibility Toolkit ...(snip)... general instructions.

messed up the links
Source Link
DMA57361
  • 18.7k
  • 7
  • 74
  • 99

Take from an answeranswer to a similar question:

For all apps with requestedPrivilegeLevel="highestLevel" in their manifest, you can use Microsoft's Application Compatibility ToolkitMicrosoft's Application Compatibility Toolkit to shim the application with the RunAsInvoker fix, which forces the app to run with your standard user tokens.

For more information on how to use the Application Compatibility Toolkit ...(snip)... general instructions.

Take from an answer to a similar question:

For all apps with requestedPrivilegeLevel="highestLevel" in their manifest, you can use Microsoft's Application Compatibility Toolkit to shim the application with the RunAsInvoker fix, which forces the app to run with your standard user tokens.

For more information on how to use the Application Compatibility Toolkit ...(snip)... general instructions.

Take from an answer to a similar question:

For all apps with requestedPrivilegeLevel="highestLevel" in their manifest, you can use Microsoft's Application Compatibility Toolkit to shim the application with the RunAsInvoker fix, which forces the app to run with your standard user tokens.

For more information on how to use the Application Compatibility Toolkit ...(snip)... general instructions.

removed irrelevant program-specific section of the quote
Source Link
DMA57361
  • 18.7k
  • 7
  • 74
  • 99
Loading
Source Link
DMA57361
  • 18.7k
  • 7
  • 74
  • 99
Loading