organise
Kid-Proof Your PC with SteadyState
Posted by Kevin Purdy at 2:00 AM on July 6, 2008

When you've got your Windows XP or Vista setup running perfectly, you don't want to lose all your painstaking customisations to a reckless tot, an experiment-minded friend or spouse, or a rogue system-lousing program. Windows SteadyState, as we mentioned earlier this week, helps you to create a kind of virtual rubber room those types can play around in and not really harm anything. SteadyState can also restrict web site access for innocent eyes, set timer limits on user access, and get better control of those other folks who use your computer—in other words, SteadyState makes you the Grand Master Sysadmin of your single-unit empire. Let's take a look at setting up SteadyState and get familiar with a few of its key features.
Prep your system
Take Microsoft's advice and do a little groundwork before installing and setting up SteadyState. Download the latest updates for your system from Windows Update, set a password for the main user, or "Administrator," account if there isn't one already, and make sure that other users only have access to the programs you want them to. To see if that's the case, create a new user account (Control Panel->User Accounts->Create a new account) or log into an account other than your own if you're already sharing a system. Peek into the Start menu, look around on the desktop, and if they've got access to stuff you don't want them playing around with, regardless of any protections, head back to your account and uninstall the program. Some programs give you an option to install them for "Just this user," so try re-installing the app with that option if possible.Getting started
If you haven't already done so, download your copy of SteadyState. You'll likely be prompted to install or run a Windows Genuine Advantage tool or plug-in before downloading; go ahead and do so, install the program, then launch it from the Start menu. Close down the help window that pops up, and you're at SteadyState's main launcher:
From here you decide how you want to protect your system. Are you creating a long-term, super-locked-down account for adventurous young minds or accident-prone users? Are you trying out an app or system change that might throw everything into calamity? Let's look at your options.
Restrict a new or existing account
If your potential system-messers are going to be around for awhile, you'll want to hit "Add New Account" in the lower right-hand corner, or choose one already there. Give them a name (or just "Shared" if you want everyone to use the same locked-down, guest-type account), password, and icon. If you've set up separate hard drives or partitions on your system, you could also have that user's profile placed on one of them for easier portability (and fixing), but you'll likely just be hitting "Next." You'll arrive at the main account dashboard. Here's a few items you'll want to look into:
"General" tab: The use timers are pretty helpful for parents who want to limit their young ones' monitor-zoning, but the real power-tweak here is the "Lock profile" button, which makes the account something like a public terminal—nothing a user changes in their user profile is saved once they log off.
Windows restrictions: Now we're getting to the serious stuff. There's a lot of buttons to toggle and explore, but the general High->Medium->Low category selectors are pretty good guidelines for getting started. In most cases, you'll want to block off access to the Registry editor, Task Manager, Control Panel, and (these are important) prevent them from locking the computer or changing their passwords. You can also block off access to specific drives from this screen.
Feature Restrictions: Here's where you lock down the Internet, for both young minds and those who download and install whatever they see online. Most of the options are self-explanatory, but check out the top option—you can create a whitelist that this account can only see online (at least in Internet Explorer, and assuming you've locked down installation of other, trickier browsers). You'll want to remove the users' access to IE's settings, and there's a few tweaks for Microsoft Office as well.- Block Programs: Pretty straight-forward—search for or click on an app on the left, then choose "Block" to remove access to it.
Before you close out, though, click on "Set Computer Restrictions" and peruse the options there. Most important among them are the settings that remove access from the Administrator account, just in case your fellow users are good guessers or slightly devious. You've now got some seriously locked-down accounts, and you can import and export them from the main menu if you need this kind of setup on multiple systems. But you can take your protection a step further by creating a crash-proof hard drive. Enable Disk Protection
From SteadyState's main menu, head to the "Disk Protection" section:
Close out any serious work you're doing—enabling the Disk Protection feature is going to bring up one of those inescapable restart prompts—and make sure you've got a little disk space to spare. Once you enable this feature, Windows creates a large cache file to store all the changes you or anyone else is making to the system, which it unceremoniously dumps at restart, or whenever you tell it to let go.
Let me stress this point: Disk Protection will reset everything you do while it's turned on: new Word documents, browser bookmarks, system settings, you name it. Turning it "Off," though, deletes the cache space and requires a restart, so switch it to "Retain all changes permanently" when you need to get things done.
Those are the basics of SteadyState, but if you need more help, SteadyState's home page has a video introduction and reference materials, and the program's own help menus are impressively detailed.
How do you use SteadyState to lock down your system? What settings and tweaks are indispensable for kids, virus-prone browsers, or other keyboard sharers? Tell us about it all in the comments.
Tags: kids | organise | parent hacks | privacy | security | steadystate | vista | windows | xp

Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
There are currently no AU comments for this post.
Al Iguana
Posted 2:27 AM 6/7/08
I've just had a thought: that would be brilliant for an xp/Vista Media Center PC. Your kid has the remote, and they're pressing buttons leftright+center. However, when you restart, all accidental changes are reset. Don't know how this would work with a library, however, if anything you add is going to be lost at next reboot. I'll have to have a play around with it.
Al Iguana
bluegene
Posted 2:38 AM 6/7/08
I like the look of the harddrive protection feature, does it work anywhere as good as Deep Freeze?
bluegene
pdok
Posted 3:17 AM 6/7/08
I'm guessing a huge performance hit? It would be worth it for certain apps, but at my library the systems are older, donated dinosaurs and there's no way they'd be able to cope with this.
pdok
xizdaqrian
Posted 3:34 AM 6/7/08
I've been using SteadyState for over a year. It's a great addition to Windows XP and no, no performance hit! Just make sure you triple-check all settings before you start it.
Highly recommended if you want kids to stop installing games on the wrong drive or screwing up the system!
xizdaqrian
KennyM
Posted 4:00 AM 6/7/08
@Saad_Baig
Ah, to be a kid again. You're nowhere near being a Windows power user. Just because you know how to use a computer doesn't mean you can call yourself a power user. Hate to burst your bubble but you turning off services and things like that doesn't require a lot of skill and doesn't actually make your PC much faster...
KennyM
Saad_Baig
Posted 3:48 AM 6/7/08
I may be 15 but I have my OWN desktop Computer and I do not install things but actually try to DELETE unneeded apps from my machine. I am a Windows Power User and will hack Windows (in a good way) to make it as fast and effeicent as possible!
Saad_Baig
Saad_Baig
Posted 5:12 AM 6/7/08
@KennyM: Ah must you judge me by my age, I've run windows since I was 9, and I was facinated about how much work Goes into such an immense being, Now I have seen that and taken into my interests to be a Programmer for microsoft itself. I currently am a beginner-extremely low middle class programmer. I have gone DEEP into my computer almost putting the computer itself into jeopardy JUST to get into the roots of this AMAZING system. Now I here about linux and am planning to go into that after reading this AMAZING article on Digg
[digg.com]
I classify myself as a power user BUT We all have different definitions of what "power user" means. To me that means getting INTO the OS you work on to find out more about it, making it better,more efficeint,faster and MUCH easier to use. I have ALOT of expeirence under my armpit. I look forward to your reply.
Saad_Baig
an8kid
Posted 5:50 AM 6/7/08
Well if anyone's a child power user, id like my names up for grabs...
I have built 3 computers over the course of this year, two run windows xp, and one runs Ubuntu, I have used parts from old set top boxes, from televisions to keep the hard drives up to speck, it has neon (a nice touch) and has 3 screens, (multi moniter) ALL 3 computers are controlled via one keyboard and mouse,(tutorial from lifehacker.com (synergy) and i recently bought a macbook.
I am learning PHP and MYSQL I am also a web design artist
check out my myspace.. If you want to see it... add me!
www.myspace.com/cleverclogs
www.ckdesigns.co.nr <--- my site!
(note i am talking about the style of the site,... not the content.. Im to lazy to upload anything... and im switching server soon anywho.... (I hate the annoying pop ups))
I use Blender for 3D animation.
I control a DMX lighting rig at school from my laptop
AND...
I am building a stepper motor controlled chemical mixing apparatus at school for my Design Technology project...
Oh... Did i mention i'm 15?
Over and out!
an8kid
Al Iguana
Posted 5:32 AM 6/7/08
@KennyM: I think you underestimate "the kids". They are the ones hacking their machines to death just to get better frame-rates from their games. It's a different kind of power-use.
That being said, anyone over 13 ought to have their own computer - and with having your own computer comes responsibility: the responsibility not to spill coke over it, not to wipe the system, not to install spyware glitter-makers and such, and the responsibility to learn the system you've been given. To take a car analogy, I wouldn't give you a car then expect you to call me every two minutes to drive you somewhere or change the oil. You do it. It's your machine. Good for Saad_Baig for not just being a user, for wanting to delve, for wanting to understand. In ten years he'll be running a network :)
This article, and the Steadystate concept, applies more to your seven-year old, who wants to play in Paint but ends up wiping your work folder.
Al Iguana
an8kid
Posted 5:54 AM 6/7/08
oops, forgot to mention...
Steadystate sounds good, I may install it, because i am always mucking around with regerstery entry's,
so it would be good to have something to fall back on.
an8kid
KennyM
Posted 6:56 AM 6/7/08
@Saad_Baig
You mention you've almost put the computer at jeopardy because of you trying to dig into the system? How do you manage to do that? You can ALWAYS format to fix anything. How can you consider yourself a power user if you're just now hearing about Linux, and can't even spell 'hear' correctly?
KennyM
Duane
Posted 7:18 AM 6/7/08
I think I will have to try this on the lobby computer at my hotel.
Duane
Saad_Baig
Posted 7:08 AM 6/7/08
Formating doesnt Fix registry leaks and ERRORS (thank god for Revo Uninstaller) Or I would still be stuck with stupid Flyakite OS X uxltheme) o
Saad_Baig
Saad_Baig
Posted 7:07 AM 6/7/08
nonononononno Ive heard of linux WAYYYYYYYYY back in my day buddy! I have just started to realize that it MAY me a option since Ive gone WAY too far into windows to Ditch it! I would like to try linux and im waiting for the Newest 8.4.01 Ubuntu Hardy Heron To be portable so I can boot it from My 8 gb flash. What is the point of runnint linux if I didnt need it in the past? I am up for new frontiers and Linux is THAT frontier!
Saad_Baig
send9
Posted 7:47 AM 6/7/08
So what's a Power User -- does that mean your parents put you in the "Power User" group in Windows? Soon you may be Admin!
send9
lol123
Posted 7:45 AM 6/7/08
@lol123:
I thought it ate my comment, that's why i posted
@lol123:
lol123
lol123
Posted 7:43 AM 6/7/08
@KennyM: dont underestimate us "kids" I built two computers and became an MCP last year, at 15
@Saad_Baig: please stop before you ruin our good name.
of course formatting removes registry errors
lol123
send9
Posted 7:43 AM 6/7/08
@Saad_Baig: Why don't you run both at once, or run a Linux VM?
When I was 15, I ran Slackware and FreeBSD 4.0, either all command-line or with X-Windows + WindowMaker or Enlightenment. Back then you could make your monitor smoke by misconfiguring X (and I did several times), but that's what it made fun. Saying that you're "too into Windows" to try a point-and-click OS like Ubuntu is a cop out. If you want to learn something, just go for it.
send9
lol123
Posted 7:34 AM 6/7/08
@KennyM: @
I too consider myself a windows power user at 15.
full disclosure: I'm an MCP
so Please don't underestimate us
lol123
Phoshi
Posted 8:39 AM 6/7/08
Tch, power user.
Means whatever you want it to mean.
I don't consider myself a power user, though I've messed on in the registry, written C++ apps that alter the way my system works (Often by turning a stable system into a BSOD'd system, but watcha gonna do), and managed to get Fedora working fine with my ATI card using weirdly aligned dual screen system. (Dunno about you, but I consider it an achievement. Maybe because it took so long) but no, I don't think I'm a power user. That's a silly term invented by silly people to big up their own egos.
I'm 16, btw.
@Saad_Baig: You're right. Reformatting, or wiping the entire hard disk of everything including the file structure, doesn't remove high level things like application errors or registry corruption. Of course not, that would be silly.
(<_____________________________<)
Phoshi
srudes2
Posted 8:29 AM 6/7/08
Everyone that posted their skills in here is so awesome.
Do you guys know how ridiculous you sound?
Ohh hear me... I'm so cool.
/care
I wouldn't hire anyone that is an MCP, because of his certificate. I'd rather test him myself. A lot of good computer experts aren't MCP's.
and Saad_Baig WHY are you so offensive?
Let's say you never make mistakes and stuff. There are still kids that do, and this way you can protect your own computer if you have to share it with your kids. The article just explains how to set it up if you don't know how.
Ok, I'll be 17 in a few days.(just so you guys don't think you're talking to 18+)
srudes2
Captain Bringdown
Posted 9:10 AM 6/7/08
I'm praying to the Lifehacker gods to purge the braggart/chest puffing posts out of here. Don't forsake me.
Captain Bringdown
element119
Posted 8:48 AM 6/7/08
stop harping on the kids. They're just learning, computers and life.
to be 15 again... I remember bringing my tandy 1000 home from radio shack. 100% IBM compatible. no hard drive but i bought and external floppy so i wouldn't have to switch them as much.
what the heck does this have to do with steady state?
element119
jharbert
Posted 9:35 AM 6/7/08
We've used Steady State at my company to lock down a few PCs. In each case, the bootup time was increased by about 90 seconds. Other than that it works wonderfully.
jharbert
Joshiii-Kun
Posted 9:57 AM 6/7/08
@Saad_Baig:
"I have just started to realize that it MAY me a option since Ive gone WAY too far into windows to Ditch it!"
Hahahahahahahahahahahhahahahaha. That made my day :')
Anyway, Steadystate sounds quite cool actually. I won't be needing it, but this certainly is useful for the younger computer users who aren't very tech-savvy.
Joshiii-Kun
an8kid
Posted 6:26 PM 6/7/08
This comment post has gotten rediculous...
We're kids were good at computers... Lets leave it at that...
NONE of us are power users....
@Saad_Baig:
"I have just started to realize that it MAY me a option since Ive gone WAY too far into windows to Ditch it!"
That's the most stupid comment Ive ever heard. You cannot go WAY TO FAR into windows... Unless you are actually rewriting parts of the operating system....
End of.
@Saad_Baig:
"Formatting doesn't Fix registry leaks and ERRORS (thank god for Revo Uninstaller) Or I would still be stuck with stupid Flyakite OS X uxltheme)"
WHAT???
1. formatting does defeat reg errors... it deletes everything... and formation in windows is kinda lame... use linux and format to whatever you like....
2. You call yourself a power user... because you can uninstall stuff with revo... ? oh yer... you rock.
but seriously.. we kind of defeated the comments section on this post with pointless argumentation.
just my two cents people...
over an out.
an8kid
onesix18
Posted 9:26 PM 6/7/08
At some point in the near future one of our young ones will get his own account on the PC...this looks like the way to go.
onesix18
srudes2
Posted 11:11 PM 6/7/08
@onesix18: Yes, then this is really the way to go. But, don't forget to give him a little room on the computer as well.(just give him a little more access when he's ready for it)
Good luck!
srudes2
Saad_Baig
Posted 11:28 PM 6/7/08
Looks Like I started a huge frenzy! I shall agree with @an8kid: "We're kids were good at computers... Lets leave it at that...
NONE of us are power users..." But I myst object on the fact that being a power User doesnt Just include Installing software, Its not always the hard way is the way to go, its a passion. I guess we'll never know If ANY of us has that passion
Saad_Baig
Terry
Posted 12:07 AM 7/7/08
It would be nice if a few of the comments here were actually about SteadyState.
I, personally, don't actually care how big anybody's kahonies are. I'm sure, though, that those who actually have big kahonies don't feel a need to talk about them.
Terry
Saad_Baig
Posted 12:31 AM 7/7/08
@Terry: Ah good idea! I'm probably hated now on here but oh well I was just givin insite on things. I started this I ended This! Back on topic!This "Power user" topic is OVA
Saad_Baig
lonebannana
Posted 1:17 AM 7/7/08
Oh, and to clarify; I have a 12 year old boy who Lives on WOW, and a 16 year old girl who likes to install Limewire on the comp, no matter how many times I delete it.
"Put a password on the computer" you say?
yeah. Did that. Changed it after I couldn't get through an episode of Enterprise without having to get up and enter passwords, install plugins--yadda-yadda-- for everyone.
Maybe I will just buy a new replacement external hard drive and back up the old hard drive on my 40 gig...
lonebannana
lonebannana
Posted 1:13 AM 7/7/08
I swear, a few days ago i was daydreaming {after having to do a fresh install on my windows XP machine, reloading all the programs for the kids (world of warcraft, MS Office) and ALL the stupid updates, drivers, etc.}, "I wish I could figure out how to set up the computer to Delete all the changes, and revert back to this Pristine, Newly Installed version of windows, like they had in the College Computer Lab where I used to work..."
And here it is.
Here is a note, though. I am not a power user, nor a Windows Guru--Heck, I can't even make a PowerPoint presentation (when I was in college, i would volunteer to do the presentation as long as everyone else did the prep work).
I know enough to reload a computer, install apps, and follow the intermediate instructions from documentation to fix and tweak computers. However, doesn't everybody?
Anyway, the extra point I want to say is this: Remember back in the 50's and 60's, when "kids" were working on Hot Rods in their garage? (I am gathering this happened in the 50's or 60's from watching old movies from MST3K). This is the same thing.
I used to work with a kid in a computer lab in College who would regularly hack my Solaris desktop and move my mouse around--just for kicks (pain in the ass). Now he is the Head Admin for the Unix servers, or something or other.
So, basically, there are two paths to innovation. Experimentation and Screwing-Around-And-Find-Something-Out-By-Accident.
As for me? I could not see any fate worse than being in charge of any computer infrastructure, whether it be windows, Unix, or hell, even Mac.
Yep...
lonebannana
Digital_Pirate
Posted 7:31 AM 7/7/08
So how do this stop someone from booting into safe mode and using the Super User account ? Or just booting of a Linux Live CD
Digital_Pirate
Captain Bringdown
Posted 8:00 AM 7/7/08
@Digital_Pirate: 1. You add a password to the Safe Mode Administrator.
2. Public terminals usually have an optical drive lock anyway.
3. You bypass all of that and require a BIOS boot password.
Pop-in a Live CD, or a bootable USB; it won't matter as you'll need the password to just boot at all.
Captain Bringdown
TechTalk WRLR 98.3FM
Posted 10:30 AM 7/7/08
in a school district setting, I had this set up after configuring 'my documents' to point to network drive. People could save/delete/whatever to docs and files, but if they hosed the machine with a virus or installed game or something ... reboot and done!
TechTalk WRLR 98.3FM
OrganizedFellow
Posted 11:46 AM 7/7/08
*MY*TURN*
I had a copy of XP as soon as it it the market. I've since tweaked and hacked it to my hearts content using nLite over ten times. Made the switch to Ubuntu 6 long ago after Windows Frustration (Vista Frustration hit a record of only three days to 'really' frustrate me!). Then reinstalled XP after Linux Frustration.
The cycle continued about four times after that, with one dual-boot setup.
Bought my first Mac six months ago, fell in love with the Unix environment. Ran Windows apps in that.
yada yada yada ... I'm THE POWER USER!!!
STFU! RTFM! YMMV! IMHO! KMA! and LOL!
We are all computer users. You call yourself what you will, stick it in your user profile at 'XYZ Social Site'.
There is always someone else to show you a thing or two or ten. Someone is always better than you are. I know that. You know that. We all know that.
Thank you LifeHacker for proving me right ... I learned something new today, as did we.
I recall an application called DeepFreeze, many years ago. This seems similar, but with MS all over it. Don't know how much better it is, but will give it a shot!
:)
OrganizedFellow
Capone
Posted 5:09 PM 7/7/08
Returnil has same hard drive protection. www.returnil.com
Capone
kaiz3n
Posted 10:52 PM 7/7/08
I think I know a few clients who would benefit from this.
kaiz3n
pkelly08
Posted 12:17 AM 8/7/08
I'd really like to know if this would be a viable option for a QA throw-away environment. I currently don't have the luxury of using VM's to create/maintain my environments (uninformed decision makers...) and have been looking for a way to roll back systems quickly. This sounds like it's "too-good-to-be-true." Anyone have any input in this respect?
pkelly08
TSPhoenix
Posted 4:48 PM 7/7/08
Even from when I was a little kid I was the most knowledgeable about computers. Only because I was allowed to tamper with the computer, reformat it whenever I felt like it (yes I saved other people's stuff to floppies first) and generally mess around with things to see how they worked did I become the "computer guy". If I had something eqivalent to SteadyState back then I probably would have lost interest and be not be here right not.
By all means use it to stop the kids breaking your user profile, but just get them a cheap second PC for them to do whatever they want with.
TSPhoenix
virusdoc
Posted 6:15 AM 7/7/08
Just a quibble about the description of Steadystate function in this post: the article states that Steadystate can allow you to "set timer limits on user access" in order to "limit...young ones' monitor-zoning." Although Steadystate does have an option to force logout after a set period of time, all the "young ones" need to do is log back in, and that countdown timer is reset. So it's not an effective way to regulate your children's screen time to a certain number of hours per day.
Vista Parental Controls will allow you to limit use to specific time periods during each day, but it will not allow you to stipulate that your children can have no more than X hours per day screen time. MacOS X Parental Controls will allow you to do this--give your children a maximum number of hours they can use per day, to be used whenever they choose. Does anyone know of a Windows Vista application that will allow me to set the same restriction?
virusdoc
darthobiwan
Posted 3:34 AM 8/7/08
Looks like this brings some of Vista's Parental Controls to XP. I do like the disk protection.
I just picked up a Vista Home Premium HTPC over the weekend and set it up for the family. I did run into some annoyances when setting it up for the 4 year old. She goes to pages like Sprout and Disney. With the site blocking features in even Medium security Disney.com would not load due to most of it's content (flash, js) being hosted on another server. I was even more flabbergasted when I searched for hours on the net and could not find a list of kid friendly sites I could import.
I am going to be working on a sidebar gadget for her so she can click on the site she wants to go to from there. Having quick link icons and desktop icons doesn't work when she doesn't know how to get the desktop and quick launch is too small (even with large icon view). I want to take up nearly the entire sidebar with some big clickable graphics.
darthobiwan
Digital_Pirate
Posted 12:37 PM 8/7/08
@ pkelly08 If you just need a disk protection I think DeepFreeze would do it.
Digital_Pirate
aldldl
Posted 4:56 PM 9/7/08
@TSPhoenix: I agree compleatly. Now I would at a University's computer lab. even at my age I usually have a computer I can mess around with.
(PS: it parents want, may I suggest going to a university to get those really cheep or free computers - most buy them outright instead of contracts and they also change the computers every 2-4 years)
We have some of the same features listed with this program. obviously this would not be a good choice for a university network but I think the features are very good for small - but public places... (like hotel lobby computers and such)
aldldl
zippersabrat
Posted 12:35 PM 6/7/08
I installed Steady State on a few of the computers at work to cut down on the time people could surf the internet and also to keep them from uploading pictures, installing programs, and generally just screwing the computers up. The log on for the internet cuts them off at 30 minutes with no way to avoid the shut down. They all hate it but it was the only way to keep them from abusing the privilege. Furthermore, any changes they made to the computer during the 30 minutes are immediately erased on the restart.
zippersabrat
polobunny
Posted 12:10 PM 6/7/08
@element119: Heh 15. It's been a while, and I'm barely 20. :(
And yeah, a power user isn't someone who disables a few services and opens regedit. Been there, done that, it's been a while. In my opinion, you're a power user when you remember at least 1 Windows 98, 2K, ME and XP key from the top of your head. You're a power user when you can change your desktop resolution without watching the monitor using the keyboard, when you can't help yourself but xyzzy the heck out of your winmine and last but not least, when you found the real meaning of the clock AVI in Windows XP. :P
polobunny
scameronde
Posted 8:52 PM 6/7/08
Hi,
i do not think that the comment posts are useless or even rediculous. It is all about getting a feeling how good you really are.
Do you remember how you felt at the end of elementary school? Old, wise and nearly grown up. Everybody was smaller and younger than you. And then, at the new school you was the smallest and youngest.
Same thing happens over and over again. You come to a state where you are the best in your area of expertise of all people you know, and than you realize that there are other people who regard your accomplishments as 'the first baby steps' into that area.
But how should you know without talking to other people? I think it is good that Saad_Baig tries to make a stand against the 'you are a kid and do not know anything' comments. You should not try to call him down. Just give him a feeling what still is ahead he has to learn to be a real 'poweruser'.
An for the books: i am 38, started into computer at 12, chosen it as my profession, and i am still learning something new every single day. That is the beauty in this field.
have a nice weekend!
scameronde
p.s.: please excuse my english. i am not a native speaker
scameronde
M4NIC
Posted 6:19 PM 6/7/08
In the university where I work we have used the newest version of SteadyState on new setups etc, and up to now, we are very satisfied. We've used it on a big range of pc's, from P3's to early P4's with pretty low specs, and other than a minor increase in startup time (not as big as 90s as I read above) we have no problems.
Compared to Deepfreeze, older versions of SS, and even the old dreaded safety cards, the new SS works a breeze on old and low spec pc's.
SS vs Deepfreeze: - DF easier to work with
+ SS is free
+ SS is lighter on older systems
- SS takes longer to accept changes
SS vs older SS: + Definetly more straight-forward
+ Faster than old versions
SS vs Safety cards: + Much much better performance than SC's.
+ No hardware required
+ SC's can really mess up an installation if uninstalled incorrectly
- SC's only plus: If the pc is turned off, you can have direct access to admin mode, as it takes the admin login before loading the O/S. (However,its a minus for SC's if the pc is already on)
M4NIC
ThomasG33K
Posted 1:27 PM 6/7/08
@Saad_Baig: Boy oh boy, you are gonna love Linux if you like to delve. If you delve into linux as hard as windows, you will be a competent system admin.
I started learning Linux last summer and I am still a big time novice at it. There is so much cool things packed into linux...and so many things to screwup too :P
ThomasG33K
Natronus
Posted 11:11 AM 6/7/08
Um....
I think it screwed up my comp.
I use Windows XP Media Center edition.
And I'm pretty sure that when I installed it, it changed my computer.
I tried a system restore, but it fails everytime.
The things that changed are,
-Now I can only log off, no more switching users.
-The logon screen changed, so now I have to type in my user name and password.
-The window bars look like the old Win.98 ones(Some of them)
Oh, and my comp is a shared one.
So basicly, it screwed me over.
Unless it WASN'T SteadyState.
And something else happened.
Natronus