Re: Windows XP startup best practice?



I was looking for a lot deeper answer. Turning of the welcome screen
is just the tip of the iceberg. For instance, there is a posting
that describes 13 different ways that a program can be started (see
Startup in this discussion group). I am trying to figure out what
the advantages and disadvantages of those 13 places to start a
program might be. I am looking for guidance beyond the obvious (some
places start programs on boot, some places start programs on login,
etc.). I am also looking for guidance on ways to minimize what the
user can do, besides play with the specific program we want him too.
I know how to do many of these things, but I am looking for expert
help to make sure I don't unintentionally break something, or leave a
gapping security hole.

Am I on my own?

thanks,

You might be unless you can make your questions a lot more specific.
That's a complex area and with lots of IFs, caveats and dependencies.
And besides that, the "simplest and most reliable fashion" is something
that is wide open to interpretation and personal opinions depending on
what a person's computer is set up to do (or not do).

There just is no one size fits all answer. Your best bet is to pick an
area and start studying it. Most any area you pick will lead you to the
others and research will be rather easy to broaden as you go along. The
Registry is probably one of the more complex but also most all
encompassing of the areas for you to start with. Then begin applying it
to whatever case you want it to fit. You'll begin to come to some
accurate answers for your own situation. You'll also then be able to
ask much more specific questions and probably receive much better
responses too.
One thing you're not apt to get here is anyone who will take you by
the hand and instruct you on all the details and nuances of your case.
Posters are expected to have done their own prior research before coming
to a newsgroup; being able to demonstrate that you've done that will get
you some much better answers. You'll find you just can not be spoon fed
the answer to such a wide open question. What you've done so far is
akin to going to an automotive engineering newsgroup and asking how to
build the perfect car without so much as providing the manufacturer,
brand or any other details about it.

HTH



jfh

I'm not sure what you mean exactly. Try disabling the "Welcome
Screen" from the "User Accounts" control panel.


John Hughes wrote:
Bear with me as this may get a bit long.

I am working on integrating a Windows XP based application into an
aircraft training simulation. The XP computer will only need to
run the specific applications needed as part of the training
scenario. The plan is that the system will boot, wait for the
trainer to signal that the training scenario is ready to run, then
execute the application. When the scenario is complete, the
application will terminate, and the system will go back to waiting
for the next scenario. We want this to be as transparent to the
users as possible, all they should see is there GUI interface, when
the trainer is running. I also need to be able to shutdown the
system on command from the trainer.

I have a pretty good idea about the various options for logging in,
starting an application automatically, etc. Back in the WindowsNT
days, I could set up the system so that if the user terminated the
running application, he was automatically logged off, so he never
saw the WindowsNT GUI, just the application. My first question is,
"Is there a way to make Windows XP behave this way?"

My second, more general question is, "Is there some guidance
regarding best practice for where you do various things with
respect to startup and shutdown?" For instance, you can use the
group policy editor to build computer startup and shutdown scripts.
You can also define user login and logout scripts. Is there some
recommended way of deciding where to do various operations?

I am looking for any suggestions regarding making things operate in
the simplest and most reliable fashion.

thanks,

--
jfh



.



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