More later,
Nick
Harper Maddox wrote:
If you people actually did something rather than flood A83 with this absurd thread, then we would all be happier.Quit acting like children and be mature enough to end this quarrel.-Harper Maddox jerky@ebicom.net
-----Original Message-----
From: Grant Stockly <gussie@alaska.net>
To: assembly-83@lists.ticalc.org <assembly-83@lists.ticalc.org>
Date: Wednesday, April 15, 1998 6:41 PM
Subject: Re: A83: HelpThere are no "Lower-level" bios passwords for IBMs either. I laugh at any
company that says a home/office computer is secure...btw, macs have had password protection on hard drives for ages. And its
better than PCs bios passwords. When you mount a hard drive, it loads the
driver into memory, and runs it. You need the password to format, mount,
or do anyting... Actually, if you have the right tools, and a screwdriver,
you can reformat...and the program works on SCSI and IDE...
>The closest macs get to a BIOS Password is the new Password Security Control
>Panel that protects entire drives (only on systems with IDE Drives, however)
>and if you forget the password, the only way around it is to reformat the
>drive (and if you wanted the data on the drive then it's pretty useless!)
>There are other utilities that disable the floppy and various things like
>that, but not something as low-level as a BIOS Password.
>
>More later,
>Nick
>
>Trey Jazz wrote:
>
>> i was talking about a bios password (do macs even have those?) , not an av
>> password...but whatever gets the job done i guess
>>
>> >In Mac OS you can easily set it up to have a passowrd at startup. SAM
>> >scans for unknown viruses and trojan horses. This program does about the
>> >best job that can be done. It will verify all operations that are
>> >currently being carried out. And my OS can protect against trojan
>> >horses. Not that I'd let one get on my machine, unlike some people...