I am assuming a few things here. 1. that you truly mean the My Documents sub-folder and not the "Documents and Settings" sub-tree for all the users.
2. That you updated the various registry entries that point to the folders. 3. Depending on HOW you moved the folder the ACL's could be wrong. 4. ACL's are lost when you move between volumes using copy/move; Dunno if the My Documents->Properties->Target process move the ACL's. So chances are that you're inheriting rights from C:\ that prevent access to the My Documents sub-tree or have not updated the registry pointers depending on how you moved the folder. http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555308/en-us http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310147/en-us http://support.microsoft.com/kb/195110/en-us Anthony Q. Martin wrote: > Here we go again.... > > On PC B, I had setup a 25 GB C partition with the OS and Apps loaded. > There was a second D partition that held everything else. Long story > short, I moved the "My Documents" folder from the D partition to the C > partition. It seemed as if everything moved over. However, now I cannot > open any file in "My Documents" as I get the message that Access is > Denied. I've done this kind of thing before and windows has always > allowed a system folder to be moved. Note that I have admin account for > the user Anthony. > > Any ideas? > > ____________________________________________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Everyone is raving about the all-new Yahoo! Mail beta. http://new.mail.yahoo.com
