I get an error, Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Temp\test.py", line 27, in <module> os.chown(new_file_path, owner_id, -1) ^^^^^^^^ AttributeError: module 'os' has no attribute 'chown'
What is the best way to read a files owner and permissions, create a new file then apply those permissions without using the subprocess method or command line icacls etc.
If you go to Settings, Privacy & Security, Search Permissions and turn off "Show search highlights" does it go away? This is part of MS and Edge's new AI search stuff. It's fairly new so bare with me if that doesn't do the trick, let me know!
If you create your accounts as local accounts first, then change them to MSFT ones I believe the old Machine\Username auth still works. Or you can use the real local username as shown by "echo %username%" and your MSFT password.. I believe that will work better than trying to use your Microsoft...
I would start with some dcdiag tests, make sure the domain and specifically DNS is correctly working. You can read more about dcdiag's usage here: dcdiag
I know this is an old thread but Nirsoft makes a tool that will list all global hot keys registered with Windows. You can find it here: HotKeysList - View registered hot keys on Windows
I found a thread on Steam's forums about this game with this exact issue. The resolution was to right click the game in the library and verify the files. If it finds corrupted files it'll repair them.
Since you are presumably not on a domain when you authenticate to a share on a machine, lets call it MACH-001 you should be using a local account username (let's call ours UserAccount for example) So when authenticating to shared folders on that machine try using MACH-001\UserAccount for the...
Are there .inf drivers available for your monitor? Also do you have another hard drive handy you can install a fresh version of Windows on to see if the problem persists?
Actually I just looked at Microsoft's list of supported CPU's and they did tell you correctly, is it not supported. However this is purely a software limit, and can be bypassed. I won't go into how to do so but a quick google search should get you some results ;)
Go into your BIOS and enable your CPU's TPM function. It's probably disabled. Also if you update your BIOS to the latest version it will probably toggle it on automatically for you.