A useful option of using certlm.msc over certmgr.msc is that it allows to change which computer's store you are working with.
superuser.com/questions/249484/how-can-i-start-cer...
35 That's because you have opened the Certificate Manager for the local machine - certlm.msc. If instead, you open the Certificate Manager for the user - certmgr.msc you should see your certificates. On Windows 10 you can type user certificates in the Start menu to open the same console.
superuser.com/questions/1391273/how-do-i-view-curr...
In Windows 10 Search for certlm.msc in the Start Menu or using Windows key + R. Click on the 'Remote Desktop' folder and then on 'Certificates'. There you will find the certificate this computer presents to its RDP clients. In Windows 7 Launch mmc.exe (as an administrator). 'File' -> 'Add/Remove Snap-in...'. Select 'Certificates' in the 'Available Snap-ins' list and click 'Add >'. A new window ...
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Do a Win+R on the keyboard (opens a Run box), then type in: certlm.msc, hit ok. This will bring up the certificates for the local machine, if you only want to see certs for current user then type: certmgr.msc
superuser.com/questions/1413443/where-is-the-crede...
I know I have some certificates installed on my Windows 7 machine. How can I see what they are, the nicknames they are known by, and browse detailed information (such as issuer and available u...
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0 I have a Windows 10 image which contains a Certificate to be used by the main application. However, after I run a sysprep /generalize on the image, the Certificate's private key appears to be destroyed. If I run certlm.msc, then in Personal \ Certificates, I right click on my certificate and select "Manage Private Keys..." I get an error:
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Is there a way to restore certificate which was deleted in certmgr.msc from personal store on Windows 10 machine? It does not go to recycle bin and is not a file system level objects to leverage file system recovery tools.
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0 I connected to a machine via RDP, and I'm wondering where I can find the RDP certification. I checked certlm.msc and certmgr.msc, I used the 'Find' action and nothing pops up when entering the name of the Cert image below: Do I need to install the certificate for it to show in cert manager?
superuser.com/questions/1829144/trying-to-find-rdp...
It looks like some sort of Windows snap-in rather than a custom window of Chrome. This is dumb to do all these steps just to import a 1KiB certificate file. Can I do it on PowerShell, so that this action can be automated via script? Or at least how can I open the above window without Google Chrome?
superuser.com/questions/1506440/import-certificate...
When trying to import a certificate into the Personal certificate store on a Windows 10 box, I get an error: "The import failed because the store was read-only, the store was full, or the stor...
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