F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Navigate to the Documents folder and select My Pictures.

Navigate to the Documents folder and select My Pictures.

Navigate to the Documents folder and select My Pictures.

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_DarkStone_
Member
227
01-08-2016, 07:52 AM
#1
Attempting to reach RCT3 Billboards requires navigating a concealed directory, which is currently blocked from access.
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_DarkStone_
01-08-2016, 07:52 AM #1

Attempting to reach RCT3 Billboards requires navigating a concealed directory, which is currently blocked from access.

1
10th_Doctor_
Posting Freak
768
01-09-2016, 02:45 AM
#2
Verify your identity on the system. If the lock is engaged, there may be an issue.
1
10th_Doctor_
01-09-2016, 02:45 AM #2

Verify your identity on the system. If the lock is engaged, there may be an issue.

L
LolaLouie
Senior Member
742
01-09-2016, 10:34 AM
#3
Press enter to confirm the win and see it appear on the side at Kyzer. Please follow your thread.
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LolaLouie
01-09-2016, 10:34 AM #3

Press enter to confirm the win and see it appear on the side at Kyzer. Please follow your thread.

C
csige791
Posting Freak
818
01-09-2016, 11:44 AM
#4
Your documents and picture folders are stored in your profile folder. They are saved in C:\Users\<Account Name>\ by default. If you moved them elsewhere, they can be found in the new location. You can open them via the Start menu after adding them through the Settings panel (Settings > Personalize > Start > Select desired folder). If you can't find them, right-click the folder, choose Properties, navigate to the Security tab, and click Advanced. A window will appear with the "Owner" field showing your account. If it shows a random number, click "Change," then in the dialog click "Advanced" > "Find Now." Select your account, double-click it, and confirm. Under the "Effective Access" section, click "Select User" and choose your account again. In the Permission tab, verify your account has full access; if not, add it using the "Add" button and set permissions to full access (uncheck if grayed out). Restart this process when finished.
C
csige791
01-09-2016, 11:44 AM #4

Your documents and picture folders are stored in your profile folder. They are saved in C:\Users\<Account Name>\ by default. If you moved them elsewhere, they can be found in the new location. You can open them via the Start menu after adding them through the Settings panel (Settings > Personalize > Start > Select desired folder). If you can't find them, right-click the folder, choose Properties, navigate to the Security tab, and click Advanced. A window will appear with the "Owner" field showing your account. If it shows a random number, click "Change," then in the dialog click "Advanced" > "Find Now." Select your account, double-click it, and confirm. Under the "Effective Access" section, click "Select User" and choose your account again. In the Permission tab, verify your account has full access; if not, add it using the "Add" button and set permissions to full access (uncheck if grayed out). Restart this process when finished.

P
PisulasRule
Senior Member
676
01-15-2016, 04:03 PM
#5
The file system I'm trying to reach is locked by permissions. The directory is hidden on Windows, making it unreachable even with admin privileges. This issue persists across operating systems older than XP.
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PisulasRule
01-15-2016, 04:03 PM #5

The file system I'm trying to reach is locked by permissions. The directory is hidden on Windows, making it unreachable even with admin privileges. This issue persists across operating systems older than XP.

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strandofgrass
Member
52
01-19-2016, 03:18 AM
#6
It seems the final paragraph is likely the intended message. This indicates you have malware present. If it's a new type, standard detection methods may fail. Investigate ways to recover the folder—connect your drive as a secondary storage device, possibly on a non-Windows system to bypass NTFS restrictions. You might also consider using a live Linux environment.
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strandofgrass
01-19-2016, 03:18 AM #6

It seems the final paragraph is likely the intended message. This indicates you have malware present. If it's a new type, standard detection methods may fail. Investigate ways to recover the folder—connect your drive as a secondary storage device, possibly on a non-Windows system to bypass NTFS restrictions. You might also consider using a live Linux environment.

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Babogamer4563
Member
69
01-20-2016, 03:23 PM
#7
I don't mean access these. I mean a 'My Pictures' folder that should be here. ' I doubt it's any kind of malware that is doing this since I never noticed a folder here in 7 even on fresh install that was called "My Pictures". Microsoft put it out of service after XP (said from other sites), and I need to get it back so I can get RCT3 billboards, unless theres a way to reroute it.
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Babogamer4563
01-20-2016, 03:23 PM #7

I don't mean access these. I mean a 'My Pictures' folder that should be here. ' I doubt it's any kind of malware that is doing this since I never noticed a folder here in 7 even on fresh install that was called "My Pictures". Microsoft put it out of service after XP (said from other sites), and I need to get it back so I can get RCT3 billboards, unless theres a way to reroute it.

S
Silvinha10
Senior Member
694
01-23-2016, 04:27 PM
#8
That’s not an actual folder—just a legacy reference for old programs. The real location is inside the user directory.
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Silvinha10
01-23-2016, 04:27 PM #8

That’s not an actual folder—just a legacy reference for old programs. The real location is inside the user directory.

S
Sheik1soul
Senior Member
511
01-24-2016, 01:10 AM
#9
It seems like the issue you're encountering is related to XP compatibility. For programs that use hard-coded paths to directories, the correct approach involves using the proper API instead of relying on Windows' default methods.
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Sheik1soul
01-24-2016, 01:10 AM #9

It seems like the issue you're encountering is related to XP compatibility. For programs that use hard-coded paths to directories, the correct approach involves using the proper API instead of relying on Windows' default methods.

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EggsyDiamond
Member
166
01-31-2016, 10:10 PM
#10
Find alternative methods beyond standard compatibility routes.
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EggsyDiamond
01-31-2016, 10:10 PM #10

Find alternative methods beyond standard compatibility routes.

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