UAC popping up on (seemingly) everything

Classic OCUK response there! Automatically go to the "you're making this up" chain of thought. The biggest downfall of this place.

We're outsource IT so different companies have different setups. If the client wants their users to have admin rights so they can install things then we obviously comply. We can recommend against things but at the end of the day they get what they ask for.

Biggest downfall is people giving poor advice, stating information as fact, when there's no evidence to back it up and then insisting that advice is trustworthy because they "work in I.T."

My cleaner "works in I.T.", he also works in "the conference center" and "the front reception". Just because you "work in I.T." neither makes you correct nor negates the sheer lack of information or evidence in your original reply to the OP.

Disable the UAC? Yes if YOU know what you're doing, have adequate AV protection, run regular scans and regularly back up. It should be a last resort though.

OP - I've had a similar problem in the past with motherboard monitor and a few other monitoring apps, turned out that it was the chipset driver I'd installed, no idea why but when removed and the default driver which came with the motherboard CD was installed the UAC behaved normally. If it's really a problem though I'd genuinely recommend restoring windows from backup or reinstalling entirely before you disable UAC.
 
My cleaner "works in I.T.", he also works in "the conference center" and "the front reception". Just because you "work in I.T." neither makes you correct nor negates the sheer lack of information or evidence in your original reply to the OP.

Disable the UAC? Yes if YOU know what you're doing, have adequate AV protection, run regular scans and regularly back up. It should be a last resort though.

.

:facepalm

Way off topic so I won't say anymore.

Anyway back to topic. Yes UAC will prompt a lot when installing software, it's perfectly normal. If you are having lots of problems using certain software then uninstall completely, restart and then re-install. See if that resolves.
 
We can recommend against things but at the end of the day they get what they ask for.

I want a new MBP 15" with retina display, can I have that?

I want an iMac 27" can I have that?

I want a new 250K house, can I have that?

I want my own island, can I have that?

UAC is there to warn the users that something needs to install, are you sure? Anyway with correct Group Policies applied users shouldn't have a problem as they shouldn't be installing things themselves.

This also depends on what 'type' of user they are. Easiest thing is lock down software installs. SCCM is a lovely way of controlling a network for software.
 
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OP - I've had a similar problem in the past with motherboard monitor and a few other monitoring apps, turned out that it was the chipset driver I'd installed, no idea why but when removed and the default driver which came with the motherboard CD was installed the UAC behaved normally. If it's really a problem though I'd genuinely recommend restoring windows from backup or reinstalling entirely before you disable UAC.
This actually caught me out as well. Went to ASUS site, saw the Chipset driver on offer was old so went to the Intel site instead. Turns out I downloaded the wrong one somehow, which explains the instability I was experiencing (unrelated to this exact problem I think), good catch!

Ended up completely reinstalling Windows because my partition was too small for it since moving to 16GB RAM (forgot about the page file). Turned UAC off from the start, job done :)
 
Don't know if this is solved yet but if you want to bypass UAC for certain programs I believe you can make a scheduled task to run the program with Admin privileges (run as user -> admin) and then just launch it from a shortcut.

Bit of a hassle but useful if you don't want to disable UAC (don't know why it doesn't have a whitelist feature ala "remember my choice for this program in future").
 
There's no whitelist because then vendors wouldn't really bother fixing the problem, they would just whitelist their own software and pretty much defeat the purpose of UAC.
 
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