File sharing and permissions in Windows XP seem complicated.
                            Microsoft provides a Knowledge Base article, but reading                              it is like walking through molasses: It describes                              in infinite detail a file security system based on                              a 1-to-5 scale. However, if you look for this 1-to-5                              scale anywhere in your security-settings interface,                              you may come away a little confused. These numbers                              are nowhere to be found. 
                            Microsoft's 1-to-5 scale means nothing to the individual                              user and relates in no way to the actual practice                              of setting your security protocols. Enter the Screen                              Savers. We are here to explain it to you. 
                            The security settings the user actually sets relate                              to read access, write access, shared folders, and                              password protection. These features are available                              in both Windows XP Home Edition and Windows XP Professional,                              however the features only work if the operating system                              is installed with NTFS. FAT32 does not support the                              file permissions described here. 
                            You can choose to install Windows XP Home using NTFS,                              but you should use a FAT32 file system if you are                              dual booting and want to see the contents of your                              Windows 95, 98, or Me partition from your XP partition.                              Your file system is not set in stone when you install                              Windows XP. You always can change your file system                              from FAT32 to NTFS without losing any of your data;                              however, the transition is one-way only. 
                            There is no going back to FAT32 from NTFS unless you                              grab a copy of Partition Magic. Microsoft recommends                              you install Windows XP Home with FAT32 if you intend                              to install more than one OS on your computer or if                              your hard drive is less than 32GB. 
                            If you have Windows XP Home or Professional running                              NTFS, you can hide files and entire folders from prying                              eyes. When you set up multiple user accounts on one                              machine, any user with administrator access can view                              the documents in another's My Documents folders. To                              protect a folder, right-click it, choose Properties,                              the Share tab, and select "make this folder private."                              No one, not even a fellow system administrator, can                              access these most secret files. 
                            Every file or folder contained within whichever folder                              you choose to make private will take on the settings                              of the parent folder. If the administrator does not                              have a password to the account, Windows XP will prompt                              the user to make a password or risk subjecting his                              or her private work to public scrutiny. No Windows                              password means no protected files. 
                            A person who logs in as a guest or as a user without                              administrator privileges cannot see the contents of                              any other user's My Documents folder, even if the                              folder has not been explicitly made private. The user                              with limited privileges can, however, set a password                              and protect his or her documents from the prying eyes                              of the administrators. Windows XP is all about privacy.                              
                            It is a nice feeling to keep your personal tax documents                              secure from the passing lookey-loo. It's about time                              Microsoft made snooping your computer more difficult                              than snooping your medicine cabinet.


 

 
 
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