The customer's computer broke down, so he took out the hard drive and connected it to another computer. He never expected that he did not have access permissions to access the folder. What should he do?
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Solution process
Find the previous computer's C drive here, check the partition size and file content, and confirm that the E drive is the previous hard disk's C drive. If you want to find the folder on the previous desktop here, you must know the path to our desktop folder.
The desktop folder is by default located in Drive C - Users\Users - the user name previously used on the computer - Desktop\Desktop.
After entering the E drive, find the Users folder or user folder, find the previous user folder, and you can see that the previous account was the Administrator account, the super administrator account. Double-click to open it, and you will find that you currently do not have permission to access the folder. Click "Continue" to obtain permanent access to the folder. When we click Continue. We found that after waiting for a long time, we still did not have access to the user access rights in the hard disk before the Administrator. (Of course, sometimes, we can get Administrator permissions, but sometimes it really doesn't work)
Is there no way out at this time? Of course, if you have a PE U disk, you can also directly enter the PE U disk to copy, but many users, who are not computer repairmen, do not have a PE U disk at all, so what should they do at this time?
Why, when the hard disk is connected to another computer, there is no permission to access the folder on the desktop? That is because the current computer user does not have sufficient permissions to access the user folder in the previous hard disk. Let's check the user name in the current computer and find that the admin user is a normal administrator, but the desktop folder in the connected hard disk we access is a folder under the Administrator user. Normal administrator permissions cannot access files under the Administrator super administrator user.
At this time, we can also switch the current computer user name to the Administrator user.
Use the win+r key to open the run window and enter compmgmt.msc in the run window.
Open Computer Management, find Local Users and Groups, find Users. Find the Administrator user, right-click Properties, and uncheck the box next to Account is disabled. Then click OK.
After confirmation, use the win+L keys to switch users and switch to the Administrator user.
After the switch is completed and we enter the Administrator user, we can access the user desktop files in the previous hard disk normally again.