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#1
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Is there a way to give someone access to the Task Tray Calendar, without
making them a Power User, or Administrator on the local machine? -- William H. George VP, Operations Quality Painting & Wallcoverings, Inc. |
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#2
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"WHGeorge" <WHGeorge@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:2514909C-A09F-4260-9109-C50A172E4F44@microsoft.com... > Is there a way to give someone access to the Task Tray Calendar, without > making them a Power User, or Administrator on the local machine? > > -- > William H. George > VP, Operations > Quality Painting & Wallcoverings, Inc. Start--> Run--> SECPOL.MSC--> Local Policies--> User Rights Assignment --> Add "Users" (or whatever group... or even individuals if you really want although that can get to be mess to administer in large environments) under "Change System Time." Reboot. If you have a domain, you would probably want to do this through Group Policy instead of local policy settings. Note: this will allow them to actually change the time, which can be considered a security problem (for example, if you rely on local logs for security auditing.) Also if they change the time too drastically and you run a domain, they may have trouble logging on. If you just want to use this as a calendar without extending more rights, you may want to consider one of the many other apps available online (which have some nice features.) Although I use the Windows Time/Date applet as a calendar too =) -- Colin Nash Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User |
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#3
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Thanks!
-- William H. George VP, Operations Quality Painting & Wallcoverings, Inc. "Colin Nash [MVP]" wrote: > > "WHGeorge" <WHGeorge@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:2514909C-A09F-4260-9109-C50A172E4F44@microsoft.com... > > Is there a way to give someone access to the Task Tray Calendar, without > > making them a Power User, or Administrator on the local machine? > > > > -- > > William H. George > > VP, Operations > > Quality Painting & Wallcoverings, Inc. > > > Start--> Run--> SECPOL.MSC--> Local Policies--> User Rights Assignment --> > Add "Users" (or whatever group... or even individuals if you really want > although that can get to be mess to administer in large environments) under > "Change System Time." Reboot. If you have a domain, you would probably > want to do this through Group Policy instead of local policy settings. > > Note: this will allow them to actually change the time, which can be > considered a security problem (for example, if you rely on local logs for > security auditing.) Also if they change the time too drastically and you > run a domain, they may have trouble logging on. > > If you just want to use this as a calendar without extending more rights, > you may want to consider one of the many other apps available online (which > have some nice features.) Although I use the Windows Time/Date applet as a > calendar too =) > > > > -- > Colin Nash > Microsoft MVP > Windows Shell/User > > > > |
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