System Restore Disabled Windows 10 [Troubleshoot]
System Restore Disabled Windows 10 [Troubleshoot]
If you receive a System Restore is disabled by your system administrator message, this post will help you fix the problem on your Windows 10/8/7 computer. It happens even to computers which are not a part of a domain or company. The primary reason behind these is incorrect policies and registry entries, but it can be easily fixed.
One of the most terrifying problems that any Windows 10 user has ever faced is the “Account has been disabled” problem. The “Account has been disabled” error message (or the “Account has been disabled. Please see your System Administrator” message – to be more specific) basically says that a user account has, for some reason, been disabled.
The “Account has been disabled” problem can appear either after something goes wrong and you are locked out of your user account for some reason or your computer shuts down inappropriately while you are in the process of creating a user account after a fresh Windows 10 installation or upgrade. If this problem appears after your computer shuts down inappropriately while you are in the middle of creating a user account after a fresh Windows 10 installation or upgrade, you will be greeted with a user account named defaultuser0 when you boot the computer up, and any attempts to log in to this user account will be greeted by the “Account has been disabled” problem.
This tutorial will apply for computers, laptops, desktops, and tablets running the Windows 10 operating system (Home, Professional, Enterprise, Education) from all supported hardware manufactures, like Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Toshiba, Lenovo, and Samsung.