Byron wrote:
> I have the reverse problem to fanny. I have a 15 year old son who I trust and
> want to have administrator access so he can load software etc etc. However I
> want to restrict him from the worst of the internet. I could do this with XP
> and Norton Internet Security.
> Vista & OneCare however won't let me do it. I make him a standard user just
> to control internet, and every 5 minutes he's asking me for an administrator
> password to fix something he can't do. If I give him administrator password
> and he can unblock internet controls.
> Is the only way I can deal with this to throw away OneCare and buy a third
> party internet control software with separate log in/password and make him an
> administrator??
>
Next time please make a new post instead of inserting your question into
a very old thread.
You cannot have your cake and eat it too. ;-) Make your son a standard
user (and both of you should be running as Standard users anyway). You
can pick and choose which part of the Parental Controls you want to
enable. You have to decide how much control you want to apply to your
son's computing life and if you want a lot of control, you have to be
there to "fix something he can't do". Sorry.
OneCare has nothing to do with Parental Controls. OneCare is an
all-in-one product covering antivirus, antispyware, antiphishing, a
firewall, performance tuneups, backup & restore (information taken from
its website).
http://onecare.live.com/standard/en-us/default.htm
I don't recommend it in any case. The antivirus has a very low catch
rate and the "performance tuneups" are just plain dangerous (like all
registry cleaners).
Malke
--
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
"Don't Panic!"
MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User