You don't need to edit anything? |
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You don't need to edit anything? |
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So far, Hiren's boot disk seems like it'll help. I'll try that. |
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While it is possible to change a Linux password by editing a simple file, this is not true for Windows installations. There really is no good way to recover a lost password, as far as I know. |
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Lost count of how many lucid dreams I've had
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I didn't read it, its just common sense that the password would be in the registry. .... this calls for some Virtual box testing! |
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Here's a video on how to use a BackTrack Linux Live CD to login to windows vista without a password: |
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Last edited by Vertebrate; 03-16-2011 at 11:04 PM.
Very nice find Vertebrate. Would you even need backtrack, looks like it should work with any linux distro. |
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Last edited by LikesToTrip; 03-17-2011 at 06:59 AM.
Yeah it's quite fascinating. I might try it out in my school one day, just to mess with them. |
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Lost count of how many lucid dreams I've had
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I miss being at school for that very reason. |
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No problem. I actually found this using stumbleupon a couple weeks ago. I assumed it would probably also work with Win7 but I haven't tested it on my laptop yet. And yeah other linux distro live CDs work too. Backtrack is just a nice live CD with even more tools on it. You can even do this as an unprivileged user, the only thing that stops you from renaming Utilman.exe is explorer. I was able to rename it from a regular user account using a tiny C program I wrote. |
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Were the commands in Ubuntu identical to the video? I tried it with an Ubuntu LiveUSB on my Win7 x64 machine, and "ls" turned up no results for /mnt or /media, with sda1 kicking out "no such file or directory." |
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If you have a sense of caring for others, you will manifest a kind of inner strength in spite of your own difficulties and problems. With this strength, your own problems will seem less significant and bothersome to you. By going beyond your own problems and taking care of others, you gain inner strength, self-confidence, courage, and a greater sense of calm.Dalai Lama
The drive has to be mounted to be viewed, and the drive might not be sda1. If you go to System>Administration>Disk Utility you can find the drive with Windows on it and mount it from there. Then it should show up in /media as a random number/letter combination. After that it's the same as the video. |
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Sweet, that did it. Oddly, I get I/O errors when I try "Run Ubuntu from this USB," and have to "Install Ubuntu on a Hard Disk" then quit the installation process to get the OS to load, after which it works fine. |
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Last edited by Taosaur; 03-18-2011 at 08:24 AM.
If you have a sense of caring for others, you will manifest a kind of inner strength in spite of your own difficulties and problems. With this strength, your own problems will seem less significant and bothersome to you. By going beyond your own problems and taking care of others, you gain inner strength, self-confidence, courage, and a greater sense of calm.Dalai Lama
That's weird, I've never used a USB so I have no idea how to troubleshoot that |
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If you have access to a non-admin account you should be able to force rename utilman.exe and then copy cmd.exe. from there logout, press windows+u, type "NET USER <admin account name> <new password>" and it will change the password to <new password> |
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Last edited by Vertebrate; 03-18-2011 at 04:07 PM.
Update: I was able to use this method to swap the .exes from an Ubuntu liveUSB and change my sister's password to get her back into her PC. The Windows command was indeed "net user <username> *" not "net user <username> <password>" |
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If you have a sense of caring for others, you will manifest a kind of inner strength in spite of your own difficulties and problems. With this strength, your own problems will seem less significant and bothersome to you. By going beyond your own problems and taking care of others, you gain inner strength, self-confidence, courage, and a greater sense of calm.Dalai Lama
No, net user <username> <password> did not change the password. |
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If you have a sense of caring for others, you will manifest a kind of inner strength in spite of your own difficulties and problems. With this strength, your own problems will seem less significant and bothersome to you. By going beyond your own problems and taking care of others, you gain inner strength, self-confidence, courage, and a greater sense of calm.Dalai Lama
No, it either said "password changed successfully" or just dropped down to a new command prompt (there was some confusion with the admin username in the command window being different from the one on the log-in screen, so I don't remember exactly which combinations produced which outputs). When attempting to log-in after using the <un> <pw> command, though, the old password hint remained and the new password did not work. |
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If you have a sense of caring for others, you will manifest a kind of inner strength in spite of your own difficulties and problems. With this strength, your own problems will seem less significant and bothersome to you. By going beyond your own problems and taking care of others, you gain inner strength, self-confidence, courage, and a greater sense of calm.Dalai Lama
Are you sure you're trying to log in as the right user? There might be multiple users on that computer. |
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Lost count of how many lucid dreams I've had
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