INFERNO2000 0 Posted September 28, 2000 Is there a way to log in as a certain person on Win9x the same way you can in Win2k? (such as log in under my account on a remote machine without rebooting, using a connect as in Network neighborhood) Share this post Link to post
bobbinbrisco 0 Posted September 29, 2000 u can, but i think u need a program as i have seen it done at this school because they created my account and i can log onto any computer on the network and use my own preferences. ------------------ 2 Computers (networked)both have : Intel SE440BX2 Pentium III 700Mhz (100) LS-120 120 Mb (100MHz) Fujitsu 17.3 GB Ultra DMA 66/10.2 GB Ultra DMA 66 Mitsubihi 50X IDE Creative Vibra PCI 128bit Matrox Millenium G400 16Mb AGP/Diamond Speedstar 8Mb AGP Bay Netgear 10/100PCI Medium ATX Tower case 120W Multimedia MS INternet KB (PS2) MS Win2000 Pro Share this post Link to post
Spastic Computer Guru 0 Posted October 5, 2000 If it is a stand alone PC, I think if you go into to control panels and then users you can set up different users for the PC. Not positive as I have never personally tried it. If it is a network then the users need to be configured on the PC acting as the server. Share this post Link to post
DosFreak 2 Posted October 5, 2000 Yes, 9x has user profiles. They are not as locked down as NT but they can have their own desktop settings. Share this post Link to post
SuperGuru 0 Posted October 13, 2000 I've got this working Great! I use WIn98 1st Edition with user profiles, THEN, Tweak UI, Policy Editor and Win98 Config Editor Share this post Link to post
INFERNO2000 0 Posted October 20, 2000 I meant without setting your own account for example, I want to know if I can go to some users computer where I do not have a profile(and don't want one on there), and need to access my PC for one reason or another.... with 2k, you have to log in as a person...so I need to know how to do that(without programs). Share this post Link to post
kearos 0 Posted October 21, 2000 are you referring to file sharing from a Win98 machine to a Win2k machine? or are you referring to remote desktop? Share this post Link to post