"You do not have permission to open the application....."
I'm getting the above error message when trying to launch an install application from CD, from a managed user account.
I can launch it successfully from the admin user account - but then of course I can't install in the correct user account properly.
The permission on the CD appear to grant everyone read and execute permissions on the application so It seems to be something in the User configuration but I can't see what I'm missing
Any suggestions?
You need to install from an admin account. 2 choices. Create a folder in that users Home named applications, then return to your admin account and choose that folder as the destination. Or install from your admin account to normal system Applications folder, making it available to all users and put account limitations on the other users if you don't want them to have access to it.
The wording of that message is one of my pet peeves (before this it was referring to "Login Items" as "Startup Items" prior to "Tiger"). It bothers me because despite the message, "permissions" have nothing to do with why a user is unable open that application. Of course, "permissions" can affect a user's ability to run a programme, which makes the message more misleading. A parent would normally be expected to have a lot more important things to do than read up on the nuances of "permissions" vs. user management / '
mcx_settings' or hanging out on forums, so the elimination of obvious sources of confusion like this is something I would have expected the old user friendly Apple to strive for.
Anyway, that message appears when a "Some Limits" user attempts to launch an application that the "admin" has not selected in the "Accounts" pref pane ("approved", perhaps, which is the term used in '
mcx_settings') for use by the user. Hence the user is not "alllowed" to use it. In this case, it could be that "/Applications" > "Utilties" > "Installer.app" needs to be added to the "AccessList", or if it is a stand alone installer, the item on the CD may need to be added explicitly through the "Accounts" pref pane, in order for the "managed" user to be allowed to at least start the installer themselves.
However, installation by a non-admin in the "/Applications" folder would require an "admin" password anyway, so as "macjack" has suggested, installing from the "admin" account is probably the best course. I just couldn't pass up an opportunity to rant about that stupid message...
I have had this same problem with the Palm Desktop installer; I wanted to use it in a non-admin account ("account A") but the installer would only run from an admin account.
The solution:
1) Log out from A and into the admin account
2) Using System Preferences, temporarily elevate the privileges of the A account to admin
3) Log into A
4) Run the installer
5) Log out from A and into the admin account
6) Reduce the privileges of the A account from admin back to standard
Thanks all - 2 informative responses - however it still won't work. I'm obviously missing somethiing (or have something wrongly configured on the machine.)
I've tried installing from the admin account, into an application directory under the managed users (A) folder. No success. Even went so far as changing all the ownership and permissions on the new file to be owned by A and granted execute permission through terminal. Still the same message.
After biovizers comment I made sure that the Parental Controls were all turned off, so although 'Some Limits' was checked there were no limits actually ticked in the application list. still the same message.
Making A an Admin user still didn't help. A still couldn't launch the install application from the CD, which again points to somethin more general on this user I think.
Funnily A also cannot activate some Applications in the Main Applications folder such as Chess and Terminal (although that might not be surprising).
But it can activate Photoshop Elements, installed by the admin user.
It seems that the point I was missing was logging out/back in after changing the Parental Controls settings. they must only be loaded on Login so when I made changes using Fast Switching between Admin/User they had no effect.
I now have Parental Controls turned off, and all applications seem to be available properly - exactly what I wanted.