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[Previous entry: "Linux thin clients"] [Main Index] [Next entry: "OK, OK, yeah, this is bugging me..."] 10/23/2001 Archived Entry: "Webshots and Weatherbug, away with you!" The bane of the NT administrator's existence banished. I had a problem last week with a user who was complaining about lockups. I went and looked at the system, and it turned out not to be lockups at all--the system was running out of CPU cycles, so it appeared to lock up, but if you let it sit long enough, it would recover. The system had so many user-installed toys, such as Webshots and Weatherbug and RealAudio and RealJukebox, that it didn't have enough punch left to do real work. I disabled the toys, to many objections, and told the user to call me if the system had any more problems. I told her that yeah, the way I set up computers is drab and boring and utilitarian, but they work. Supposedly Windows NT won't allow regular users to install software. In reality, they can install a lot. Here's the trick. Open regedt32 (not regedit) and navigate to HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run. Go to Security. The All Users group has special access. Change that to read-only access. We did that at work on one machine, then logged in with a non-priveliged account, and we must have been the first people in history who had problems installing Webshots and Weatherbug. My normal cure for stiction is to blow-dry it to heat it up above operating temperature to loosen the oil. Lacking a blow dryer, I resorted to something I really don't like to do. Well, since this was a Mac peripheral, I didn't really care. And I made a pretty big show of it. I held the drive about six inches off the floor. "I'm gonna do it!" I said. My coworkers looked up. I released the drive, sending it hurtling to the floor. The force of the impact knocked the front of the enclosure loose. "You're recalibrating it?" someone asked. I grinned, picked up the drive, snapped the front cover back on, and plugged it in. The drive ran. I copied the data off to another drive. It was a bit slow--this isn't a healthy drive--but it copied. And the drive ran all day, to my amazement.
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Copyright © 1999-2002 by David L. Farquhar. All rights reserved.