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Windows XP: Working With User Accounts (1)
Personal settings are not just for Chrimbo,
they’re for life! Dave Cook explains how to share your computer
without fear of losing your important settings and preferences.
Sharing
a computer with other users can be a right old pain. No sooner have
you got the machine configured to your liking when, kapow… the
nipper comes along and changes everything. Before you know it, your
personalised settings and preferences have vanished quicker than a
Taliban soldier in full retreat.
Thankfully, Windows XP can put a stop to all that
nonsense. User accounts allow you to personalise settings and
preferences for everyone who shares your computer. Windows XP Home
Edition, for example, provides two types of user accounts:
administrator accounts, and limited user accounts. In addition,
Windows XP Professional provides standard user accounts, but these
are really aimed at computers connected to a domain.
The Boss
The administrator account allows the main account
holder (if the computer is set up for only one user, then that’s
you) to modify the computer in any way he or she deems fit. Put
simply, you’re the boss, the main man (woman), or, if you like, the
mullah of your domain.
As the administrator, you can also view and alter
the contents of every other account, create, edit, and delete user
accounts, change passwords, install hardware and software, and lots
more besides. You can even change your administrator account to a
limited account, but only if at least one other administrator
account remains on the computer.
With administrative rights, you assign limited user
accounts to stop inexperienced or unauthorised users (or little
tinkers like the nipper) from changing computer settings or
accessing unauthorised files. Holders of limited accounts cannot
change the personalised settings and configurations of other users.
The only system changes they can make involves changes to their
account password and logon picture. Thus, limited accounts are
useful for a variety of reasons and we’ll be looking at them in
closer detail in part two.
The Guest
Meanwhile, the Windows XP Guest feature allows
someone who isn’t a regular user of your computer to operate it as
though they had a limited account. No password is required, and
guest access allows visitors to perform functions such as browse the
Net, or write and print documents and so forth. Obviously, users who
log on using the guest account do not have access to
password-protected files, folders, or system settings.
You may, of course, wish to change the Windows XP
Guest account feature. How you do so will depend on whether the
computer is part of a workgroup or standalone computer, or whether
it’s a member of a domain. Most home or small office users will be
using a computer that is not a member of a domain, so here’s how to
turn on or turn off the guest account on a workgroup or standalone
computer.
Head for the Control Panel and click User Accounts.
You’ll see options to pick one of three tasks, or to pick an account
to change. Look closely at the latter, as this area displays all the
user accounts that exist on the computer. One of them will be the
guest account. By default, the guest account is turned off. To turn
it on, simply click Guest and then click Turn on the guest
account.
Once enabled, click Change the picture. This
provides you with several alternative picture options and enables
you to change the picture that appears on the Windows Welcome
screen. To turn the guest account off again, click Turn off the
guest account. It’s as simple as that.
Next time
In our next look at Windows XP user accounts we’ll
show you how to create and manage the computer’s user accounts, as
well as explaining the benefits of fast user switching.
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