It gives a solution, you will have access to it and use of it just not the way you currently were trying. This seem to have worked for others as well once I spread the news and like the title says, it doesn't solve the problem. For example Having another account running a certain program gives you the freedom to have different setups and configurations without risking malfunction as you can delete and create these accounts as easily as typing: This actually has benefits outweighing my expectations. Install it (locally, not system-wide, if asked) and run it (like I just described) everytime you use it. Right-click "Adobe Premiere Pro" (in your Start-menu for example) and choose: I created a user-account and I use it to run applications that, for some reason, doesn't launch properly under my administration account - my everyday account - with the "launch as" function.
Seeing as Windows implemented user-account functionality more in line with Linux or BSD operating systems, not counting the subsystem in this context, making it quite easy to create user-names and accounts for purposes that isn't limited to physical, individual users, so I did what I do in Linux So I got tired of the issues surrounding the latest Windows build and a lot of programs I used perfectly well before, now crashing or simply not loading properly. This won't solve the problem but it will present a solution