No. Crimson needs to fix their application, which must be writing a
temporary file or other information into a protected area. One workaround on
a machine with that level of horsepower is to use Windows Virtual PC and
XPMode. This leverages TS RAIL technology to have that application (running
in your virtual 32-bit XP machine) behave as if it were natively running on
your desktop. XPMode is only available in Professional and above, however,
not in Home Premium.
--
Charlie.
http://msmvps.com/blogs/Russel
"Lynn McGuire" <> wrote in message
news:i7germ$v1m$...
>I am using Windows 7 x64 with 8 GB of ram. I use the crimson editor
> ( http://www.crimsoneditor.com/ ) out of my c:\bin directory (which is
> in my path). I invoke the crimson editor frequently from command
> prompt windows, using the command cedt. However, each time I invoke
> the crimson editor, the screen goes dim and UAC panel comes up and
> asks me if cedt.exe from an unknown publisher can make changes to this
> computer. Is there a way to stop the UAC for just cedt.exe ?
>
> Thanks,
> Lynn McGuire