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Regedit can be enabled by changing the policy setting in Windows Group Policy Editor (GPEdit.msc). This however requires administrative rights.
policy
Only Windows Vista, Windows XP PROESSIONAL, and Windows 2000 Workstation clients can process the software installation policy.
first amendment
gpedit.msc
Discretionary fiscal policy requires deliberate government action. Automatic fiscal policy occurs automatically without (additional) congressional action.
Windows Vista delivers a substantial update to the Group Policy infrastructure. Yet as organizations around the world deploy Windows Vista, many administrators probably won't notice much of a difference in how they work because the numerous changes in Group Policy functions all take place under the hood. What administrators will find, however, is that Windows Vista™ Group Policy is much more powerful than it was in previous versions. Prior to Windows Vista, Group Policy processing occurred within a process called winlogon. Winlogon had a lot of responsibility, which included getting people logged on to their desktops, as well as servicing the various Group Policy chores. Group Policy is now its own Windows® service. What's more, it's hardened, which means that it cannot be stopped nor can an administrator take ownership of the permissions upon Group Policy in order to then turn it off. These changes enhance the overall reliability of the Group Policy engine.
True
True
Windows 95 does not have a system policy editor, because it does not support access controls without third-party software. Windows 95 is essentially a single-user operating system.
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