Re: How to get XP to ask for a password EACH time a networked hard drive is accessed?



Michael J. Solomon <mikesol@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, the dreary deadbeat and
gender disphoric gut scraper who likes tactless nick-nacking with
meerkats, and whose partner is a hay-bag with a diseased hot quivering
love-purse, wrote in <uio402l8b1dd9s69niqr4t6mskvomf60bm@xxxxxxx>:

On Mon, 27 Feb 2006 05:14:46 +0545, "Kadaitcha Man"
<***-you.ya.***@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Sheesh. It depends on how you have the users setup

Everyone on my network has their own computer. They are the only
person using their respective computer so I am sure they are set up to
be the administrator. My computers are under one workgroup name. But
ONE of these users is my tenet. I have no control over his computer.
So let us just assume his computer is configured the same way. I
don't want him accessing my computers over the network. I don't want
to access his. That is all.

A technical solution does not involve assumptions.

and where the share is.

Each and every hard drive on my network is shared. The entire drive.
Not individual folders. That is the way I need it. If I can not find a
solution here on usenet, I will have to share individual folders
instead. I'd rather not do that. Seeing all of my hard drives contents
from any other machine on my network is convenient.

Meaning: If you can't find a solution you can figure out how to implement
correctly...

Do the work on the machine where the share is. And make sure the
user is added as a user of the machine.

'Doing the work' is precisely what I am trying to do. Obviously, I am
not succeeding, thus my posts. *How do I give permission to some
computers and block everyone else*? I am in the security tab. I see
nothing there that points to my other machines.

Who mentioned other machines? Clearly you cannot read what is in front of
you, so along with the assumptions you wish to make, a solution is out of
your reach.

So how can I give them
permission? I tried looking for those users via local IP addresses,
their sign in usernames on their respective machines, their computer
names, nothing, nada, zip. Even under the LOCATIONS button which is
where I thought I would see them, all I saw was whatever machine I was
working on. Either I am not looking in the right place, or I am
missing something else entirely.

Or your supposed solution is utterly fuckwitted, which it is. You are going
around in circles and not reading what is in front of you. It is you who
keeps on dragging in the notion of 'LOCATIONS'.

Someone, anyone, please enlighten me.

Try suicide.

<aside>
Useless ***.

What exactly are you trying to achieve? And don't say "How do I get XP to
ask for a password EACH time a networked hard drive is accessed?" because
that is your fuckwitted solution - cleary your solutions are bull***, so
describe what it is you are trying to achieve and let real experts work out
the fucking solution. Understand? No?

Go on, have a fucking hissy fit. You know you want to.



--
"This is a phrase, NOT a sentence. It does not have a subject." - A
grammar-laming, Mac-using retard named Margolotta, completely missing
the point that the alleged phrase is self-referential thus the subject
of the sentence is the very sentence itself.

"This is the sort of English up with which I cannot put.?
Winston Churchill

.