Zum Hauptinhalt wechseln

Why is my laptop power looping on a wrong automatic repair?

I turned on my laptop today,just to see a warning on an automatic repair gone wrong.I tried accessing the command prompt for some changes,when it asked for my account password.When I placed the password it says that it is a wrong one.What should I do to fix it?

Diese Frage beantworten Ich habe das gleiche Problem

Ist dies eine gute Frage?

Bewertung 0
Einen Kommentar hinzufügen

1 Antwort

I am assuming you don't have the Administrator account activated:

How to Enable the Built-in Administrator in Windows 10 via Recovery Options

Enabling the built-in administrator account can be done through Windows Recovery Environment (aka “Recovery Options”), if Windows doesn’t boot normally or if you’re unable to login to your account.

Note: If a perfectly working Windows 10 computer with an administrator user account already present and working correctly, you won’t have the need to enable the built-in administrator (“Administrator”) account. This article assumes that you’re either unable to start Windows 10 normally, or unable to login to your administrator-level user account for some reason.

For example, here is one situation (lost administrator account password or lost the admin privileges) where you’ll need to activate the built-in administrator account. For more information, check out article Fix: Lost Administrator Rights or Password in Windows 10

(Note: Step 1 is only for those who are able to login to Windows. If can't just go to Step 2.)

Step 1: Login to Advanced Recovery Options (Windows RE)

  1. From the sign-in screen in Windows 10, press and hold the SHIFT key on the keyboard.
  2. With the SHIFT key still pressed, click the Power button and then click Restart.
  3. In the Recovery Options menu, click Troubleshoot, and then click Advanced Options.

Step 2: Enable the Built-in Administrator account from Windows RE

1.      In the Advanced options dialog, click Command Prompt.

2.      In the Command Prompt window, type the following command and press ENTER:

net user administrator /active:yes

3.      Type exit to return to Recovery Options menu.

4.      Exit and Continue to Windows 10.

Step 3: Login to built-in Administrator account

  1. When you get to the sign-in screen, hold the SHIFT key down while you select Power icon, and click Restart.
  2. Your computer restarts to the “Choose an option” screen.
  3. Select Troubleshoot > Advanced options > Startup Settings > Restart.
  4. After your computer restarts, you’ll see a list of options. Select 4 or F4 to start your PC in Safe Mode, or select 5 or F5 for Safe Mode with Networking.
  5. Log in as Administrator from Safe mode.
  6. Carry out the administration tasks using this account, such as creating a new administrator account or fixing registry or file system permissions etc.
  7. For security reasons, it’s better to disable it once you finish all your tasks using this account. To disable the built-in Administrator account, open an elevated Command Prompt window and then type:
net user administrator /active:no

That’s it! Use your built-in administrator account very scarcely.

Otherwise just use one of the password wiper programs.

War diese Antwort hilfreich?

Bewertung 0

2 Kommentare:

I have an activated account but I cannot access it since I forgot the password.This also affected other advanced options such as uninstalling updates or features and factory reseting the computer.Could you please show me what to do?

von

Hi @jacksonking

Just use one of the password wiping programs for Windows.

von

Einen Kommentar hinzufügen

Antwort hinzufügen

Jackson King wird auf ewig dankbar sein.
Seitenaufrufe:

Letzte 24 Stunden: 0

Letzte 7 Tage: 2

Letzte 30 Tage: 13

Insgesamt: 38