The app is from Certiport, and it's used to train people for certification like Microsoft Office Specialist. I think the school can also give cert tests with it.
The app requires admin rights to run, and our users don't run with admin rights. It's also not digitally signed, which Win7's UAC didn't like. So, we decided to run it in XP Mode. When my tech first installed and launched the software, it didn't give the option to train/test on Office products. Turns out this is because Office Standard wasn't installed, but the app needed Office Pro. No problem... My tech installed Office Pro. She launched the software, and voila-now the option for Office is there in the Certiport software. It apparently does some sort of checking on its own to ensure that you've got the necessary apps on your system. So my tech logs out of the host machine with her own account, and logs in with the account used by test-takers. Launches the app, but crap... No Office option in it! She can access the actual Office program with no problems, but the Certiport software doesn't seem to recognize it. She logs out of the host machine using the test-taker account and logs back in as herself, and Certiport works as expected. We've tried this several times, and it's reproducible. John From: Crawford, Scott [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, February 18, 2011 1:50 PM To: NT System Admin Issues Subject: RE: OT: Windows XP Mode Question Oh come on. We're nerds. Details are interesting. From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, February 18, 2011 12:48 PM To: NT System Admin Issues Subject: RE: OT: Windows XP Mode Question It's basically a configuration thing within the software. If you're logged in as User A on the host machine, when you launch the app in XP Mode you see different options than if you're logged in as User B. It's not really a performance issue-the application works regardless of who you're logged into the host machine as. But as you look at certain configuration settings in the app, they're different depending on what user is logged into the host. I could go into a little more detail, but didn't want to bore everyone to tears. :-) John From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, February 18, 2011 12:53 PM To: NT System Admin Issues Subject: Re: OT: Windows XP Mode Question What is the difference in behavior? ASB (Find me online via About.Me<http://about.me/Andrew.S.Baker/bio>) Exploiting Technology for Business Advantage... On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 12:23 PM, John Hornbuckle <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: Totally not NT-related, but maybe someone can answer. We're using the Windows XP Mode feature on a Windows 7 machine to run an app that doesn't play nice with Win7. It mostly works, but with one problem: The app behaves differently depending on who we're logged into the host computer as. I'm sure I'm totally misunderstanding how XP Mode works, but I don't get how this is possible. I wouldn't think it would matter who you were logged into the HOST machine as-only who you were logged into the GUEST machine as. And the way it looks to me is that there's a special account on the guest machine ("xpmuser") that's used by everyone who accesses the VM, regardless of what they're logged into the host machine as. So theoretically, no matter who's logged into the host, they should see the exact same thing in the guest. But not so. Why for? 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