Re: Log in problems

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Pegasus (MVP) wrote:
"Roger Fink" <fink@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:Oez0yjHDJHA.232@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx


Pegasus (MVP) wrote:
"Roger Fink" <fink@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:ezzHWRHDJHA.1180@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx


Pegasus (MVP) wrote:
"RickG" <RickG@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:BBC2E4E3-E911-4EFA-88F1-C124324615D6@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
We have a laptop with Windows 2000 Professional that we haven't
used in quite
a while and have forgotten both the User name and Password. Any
suggestions?

http://home.eunet.no/~pnordahl/ntpasswd/bootdisk.html

The issue is a perfect illustration for the benefit of creating an
extra standardised admin account on each and every machine, with a
standardised password.

Not to impugn the integrity of the poster (let alone the responder,
who has
bailed me out of a few dozen jams), but that info gets you into a
stolen laptop.


True, but getting into a stolen laptop is child's play anyway, even
without the Nordahl boot diskette. All you need to do is to remove
its disk, put it into a 2.5" USB disk case and connect that case to
another PC. This is common knowledge.

It comes back to this well-known fact: If you can gain physical
access to a PC then you can gain access to its files, regardless of
the operating system. Unless, of course, the files are encrypted.

I didn't know it was that easy, not that I'm surprised.

Now consider the positive implications: If Windows refuses to start
then it's still quite easy to access your files, by connecting the
disk to another PC. Much better, of course, to back up your important
files regularly.

Inasmuch as we've been around since the start of the mass-distribution PC
era, and have nothing else to compare it to, I think we've been inculcated
with the idea of accepting as normal how quirky, buggy, idiosyncratic,
unreliable and unsafe these beasts really are. In twenty five years, when
these things work like a TV or a refrigerator, people will laugh at all
this. Not now, however.


.



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