Yep, exactly as he said. BUT, as a paranoid parent, I would either NOT password protect the kids accounts OR I'd make sure I knew their passwords. Yeah, I know, pretty underhanded and sneaky. Welcome to the wonderful world of Parenthood in today's age! Even with parental controls and content filtering, there are ways around them. Even Nanny Ware isn't fool proof. What is? So some real time, personal, hand-on, sneakiness every now and then might prevent the world from reading about your child's adventures on the 11:00 news.
Bob, Still Old, Still Grey, And Still A Woolf
No trees were harmed in the sending of this message and a very large number of electrons were asked their permission to be terribly inconvenienced. And a party was thrown for them afterwards for being really cool about it.
Bob's Space - Home Page of the Olde Greywoolf
"t-4-2" <> wrote in message news:...
mike_XP_Vista;697718 Wrote:
> Thanks Bob. Let me ask more specifically on one item. Once I create the
> Vista standard kids account, and set parental controls and set up their
> AOL
> email accounts in the email program (not sure what it's called in
> Vista),
> then they log in and start the email program... what shows up? A sign
> in
> screen for them to access their email? The reason I ask is because
> under
> Windows XP I use AOL and it is great but I'd like to get away from the
> AOL
> software because it seems to really bog down the system while it loads
> and
> runs all it's stuff. I tried Thunderbird under XP and can access an AOL
> account easily, but there is no sign in option for different email
> users.
> Once the kids click on Thunderbird, what ever mail I had left in the
> inbox
> shows up. Anyway, I want to make the kids access very clean and am
> hoping
> for a way to do this in Vista... they sign into their Vista standard
> account
> and they can only get to the things Parental Controls let them into,
> AND only
> into THEIR email accounts.
>
> Hope that clarifies my concern, and again, thanks for the quick reply.
>
> Mike
>
> "Bob W" wrote:
> > > >
> > > Basically, give them a separate USER ACCOUNT using the CONTROL PANEL
> > and limit the access and password protect the adult accounts. That way,
> > not just the Mail program, but ALL programs (Mail, browser, files, IM's,
> > etc.) are all content filtered. For Parental/content control, I like
> > McAfee's system. If you are having trouble with WinMail in Vista, then
> > you might try Windows Live Mail (free download from MSN/Windows Live).
> > Works real well and lots of features and customizations and a good
> > companion for Windows Life Messenger and SkyDrive.
> > > Bob, Still Old, Still Grey, And Still A Woolf
> > >
> > >
> > > No trees were harmed in the sending of this message and a very large
> > number of electrons were asked their permission to be terribly
> > inconvenienced. And a party was thrown for them afterwards for being
> > really cool about it.
> > >
> > > Bob's Space - Home Page of the Olde Greywoolf
> > >
> > >
> > > "mike_XP_Vista" <mikeXPVista@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> > news:6F1B9C88-16C1-4452-B463-B14EDCA054BA@xxxxxx
> > > I want to set up a standard user account for an adult and one for a
> > child
> > > (with parental controls set for the child as well). When the adult
> > opens the
> > > email reader in Vista (is that Outlook Express or ??), I would like
> > them to
> > > have to sign in to their email account. Same for the child. Is that
> > > possilbe in Vista?
> > >
> > > What I specifically want is for people to have to sign into their
> > email and
> > > not see everyone else's email before, or after sign-in (similar to
> > the way
> > > AOL makes you sign in with a screen name before you get to your mail,
> > and
> > > then it's only your mail).
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > Mike > >
Hello Mike,
Permit me to butt in. What Bob was trying to tell you is that give Each
person, children or adults, an account of his/her own with password.
That way nobody can read anyone else's e-mail without password to the
account. You can set up Parental controls to each child, even customize
it . The process might seem tedious, but it's a better security system ,
in my opinion.
--
t-4-2