Type exit to quit Recovery Console and restart. Find where you saved the software. Just name it test f. Look for the Userinit field h. This will work for sure!. You computer will not log off immediately now.
Method 4: If the Userinit value is correct and all the above steps does not help and you are still logged off immediately after log in then it could be an issue with the user profile or registry associated with user profile too. Use the following steps to fix this issue. S-X-X-XX is the format of profile identifier or the security identifier of a user so Look through each Profile key under this reg key and view the ProfileImagePath value to find which key is related to which user.
Logout and login as the original user who has login issue and it will create a new profile for him. Try logging in again and it should work fine. This fixed my issue. I found an extra entry in the UserInit key.
It had "skipmetrosuite" in there. I believe that was left over from Win8 and that ridiculous metro screen. I had some software installed that bypassed the Metro UI and went right to the desktop.
Ever since I had upgraded to Win10, the user account couldn't log in unless it was in the Administrators group. Not anymore. I removed that bit about skipmetrosuite and now I can do things as expected. Thaks a lot for the article. In my case there was an extra path in the userinit key added by HP Protect Suite.
No other article found on the net helped me. Thank you. On Method 4 you need to rename the user profile, that is facing the problem. If your username is "Bob" then rename it to something like "Bob-old". You will need to login with another account or guest account if enabled. At the time of renaming authenticate with the admin password. You will have to log into another admin account on the computer from a fresh boot to do this, or it won't let you because your profile is currently in use.
If you don't know the built-in Administrator account password, there are boot disks like Knoppix you can download an. Once in, you'd reset that password, reboot, then log in as Administrator, then rename the folder, go to the registry to delete that registry key, then reboot again and log in with your old account.
If that account is not an admin, you'll have to go back in as Administrator to move files like your Favorites, Desktop, Documents over to the new folder that got created. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam.
Learn how your comment data is processed. If you like our content or it helped you fix your problem, please consider buying us a coffee. S-X-X-XX is the format of profile identifier or the security identifier of a user so Look through each Profile key under this reg key and view the ProfileImagePath value to find which key is related to which user.
Logout and login as the original user who has login issue and it will create a new profile for him. Try logging in again and it should work fine. This fixed my issue.
I found an extra entry in the UserInit key. It had "skipmetrosuite" in there. I believe that was left over from Win8 and that ridiculous metro screen.
I had some software installed that bypassed the Metro UI and went right to the desktop. Ever since I had upgraded to Win10, the user account couldn't log in unless it was in the Administrators group. Not anymore. I removed that bit about skipmetrosuite and now I can do things as expected. Thaks a lot for the article. In my case there was an extra path in the userinit key added by HP Protect Suite.
No other article found on the net helped me. Thank you. On Method 4 you need to rename the user profile, that is facing the problem. If your username is "Bob" then rename it to something like "Bob-old". You will need to login with another account or guest account if enabled. At the time of renaming authenticate with the admin password. You will have to log into another admin account on the computer from a fresh boot to do this, or it won't let you because your profile is currently in use.
If you don't know the built-in Administrator account password, there are boot disks like Knoppix you can download an. Once in, you'd reset that password, reboot, then log in as Administrator, then rename the folder, go to the registry to delete that registry key, then reboot again and log in with your old account.
If that account is not an admin, you'll have to go back in as Administrator to move files like your Favorites, Desktop, Documents over to the new folder that got created. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. If you like our content or it helped you fix your problem, please consider buying us a coffee. It will help us maintain the quality and we'll keep providing you free solutions.
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Details required :. Cancel Submit. We got it figured out. Below is the guide my boss made to fix the issue: After certain Windows updates, standard users users who are not members of Elevated Group cannot log into machines that they have not previously logged into. Be sure to uncheck this box when you are finished with all other steps. If a folder has been created for the affected user, delete it.
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