

What does the application need that it is not getting? Personally, I'd start with the first one above. Make the users administrators over their computers. Now, you could do one or some of the following: - Figure out just why the app is crashing and work around that. The only way to do that is to escalate, which involves the UAC prompt. To run with administrative privileges, an application (run by a non-admin user) must be escalated. The problem is that what you are proposing goes dead against the Windows 7 security model. It is also important to note that when you reset your primary Apple ID password, all the app-specific passwords will also be revoked automatically to protect the security of your account, and you will have to regenerate the app-specific passwords for the third-party apps that don’t support two-step verification.Īs always, let me know how it goes, and feel free to drop me a line if you’ve any questions.You may well be out of luck here, unless you change the givens in this problem. You will have to generate the app-specific password again to sign-in. Revoking the app-specific password will result in the app using the password to be signed out of the iCloud account. Click Revoke next to a password to revoke only that password, or click Revoke All to revoke all passwords.You may also want to revoke the password if you believe that your device where you’re using the iCloud account is compromised. If you’re running out of app-specific passwords then you can revoke passwords individually or all at once by following these steps. You can create up to 25 app-specific passwords for your iCloud account. You can enter or paste this app-specific password into the password field of the app you would like to use with iCloud.Enter a label for the app-specific password, and click Generate.Then click on Generate an App-Specific Password.

Click on the Password and Security option from the menu on the left-hand side.

