Re: At Ease

2003-03-22 Thread Paul Nelson
At 1:52 AM +0100 3/22/03, Fredrik Rundgren wrote: >I know this is kind of off topic perhaps... > >My "newest" Mac finding is a LC whith >Mac OS S1-7.0.1 and is running At Ease at startup. >Now Finder and open comands are password protected.. >Is there any way to get pas

Re: At Ease

2003-03-21 Thread John Smith
ypass At Ease and the password. 2. Open the hard-drive window. 3. Open the System folder. 4. Open the Control Panels folder. 5. Double-click the At Ease Setup icon. 6. In Change Password, enter a new password, or press the Delete key to remove any type of password protection. 7. Close the At Ea

Re: At Ease

2003-03-21 Thread sirksd
Sorry I did not get rid of the extraneous wording from my last post. Dan in AZ -- PowerBooks is sponsored by and... Small Dog Electronicshttp://www.smalldog.com | Enter To Win A | -- Canon PowerShot Digital Cameras start at $299 | Free iBook! | Sup

Re: At Ease

2003-03-21 Thread sirksd
I wonder if, in the absence of getting the sysop password, one can reformat the hard drive and reload the system? I think that I read somewhere that it will work and that is the only way. Throwing away any At Ease preferences, unless we can get rid of the correct preference file or Apple script

At Ease

2003-03-21 Thread Fredrik Rundgren
I know this is kind of off topic perhaps... My "newest" Mac finding is a LC whith Mac OS S1-7.0.1 and is running At Ease at startup. Now Finder and open comands are password protected.. Is there any way to get past that pw protection without reinstalling OS? Please advise! Remember, I