Good on you, Alan!

                -----Original Message-----
                From:   Clendinen, Alan
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
                Sent:   Tuesday, 10 August 1999 22:12
                To:     '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
                Subject:        Solution to silent NT startup

                Hello listers:

                Someone posted a question about how to get around the
problem of JFW not
                speaking at startup in Windows NT. Unfortunately, many of
the responses were
                un-tried assumptions offered as fact. One person even
suggested that you
                could use a DOS screen reader to read the user name and
password prompts!
                Preposterous! Come on people, if you haven't tried it
yourselves, don't post
                it! Assumptions are the mother of all screw-ups!
                The reason that JFW does not speak the security prompts that
appear at
                startup in Windows NT is because no applications, including
JFW are launched
                from the 0-ring level of NT. You must enter a username and
password before
                the startup process continues.
                There are only three options for NT users:
                1. Wait for the hard drive to stop and then enter the
security parameters
                without benefit of speech.
                2. Use Regedit to automate the passing of the required
security parameters.
                This solution is too complicated for the average user, so I
won't go into
                that.
                3. Get a copy of Autolog.exe from the Microsoft Windows NT
Developer's tool
                kit. This easy to use utility modifies the registry with the
security
                parameters you give it. From then on, your  log-in process
at startup is
                automatic! On my PC, I do have to hit the spacebar to click
an O.K. button
                in a dialog box that says that this is a NASA
computer...yata-yata-yata, but
                this is a minor speed-bump.
                The only down side to this solution is that someone could
start up your PC
                without entering a password, but you can always use Windows
locking programs
                to prevent unauthorized access to sensitive data.
                Hope this clears some things up!

                Alan
                -
                Visit the jfw ml web page: http://jfw.cjb.net
-
Visit the jfw ml web page: http://jfw.cjb.net

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