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Ryan Miller

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  1. I don't think you can. Probably want to see what others think.
  2. Thank you for the suggestions. I was wondering if there was a way to like clear the sam file on exit. Probably not, but it did come accross my mind. I will forward these suggestions to my tech group.
  3. I'm a volunteer techie and I think someone may have obtained the sam file from the local machine? That's just the "main" way I can think of. We do have everything pretty tight though. They are not able to use run - so that takes care of some issues. The problem is I have no clue how they would have obtained a sam file? We're using Novell 6.5.
  4. Does anyone have any good ideas for security and tracking software? Our school network was recently hacked - no clue how or who obtained the password.
  5. They can stop system services. (to klasika.) Is there a way to set the NTFS permissions with a log in script? And what and how do I set the permissions?
  6. In the policy I have added the group of users to the "users" group - which should restrict them from using Computer Management. But adding them to that group didn't have any effect. They can't install software anymore, etc - but they still can access Computer Management. Looked into TweakUI, but there is no setting there for it.
  7. Silly me. I forgot to include this in my original post. Is there a way to restrict the use of Computer Management? As in using it from Administrative Tools or right clicking on My Computer and clicking Manage.
  8. I have a question regarding 2003 Enterprise. What I would like is- when my users log on to the network they will always log on to the network. In other words, I don't want them logging on to the machine if the server is down, etc. I created a test user with the username john.doe. With the server still online I logged on to a remote workstation. I shut down the server and logged off of that remote workstation. I typed john.doe in the username box with the correct password and it allowed me to log in. (Even though the server was off.) Granted, the user could not use the internet, get their files, etc..- I still don't want them logging in when the server down. Is there a way to restrict this with group policy? Any help would be great. I'm stumped on this one.
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