Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
Microsoft is at it again
Message
 
 
To
08/08/2003 11:56:12
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00818236
Message ID:
00818347
Views:
17
>I understand that, but I am able to delete them from the dllcache folder and get rid of them, as long as I have one, and it is easier to do this via a .bat file on a network of many people. The big question is, why didn't they add the games to dllcache folder in the "home" edition and leave it out in the "Professional" edition? I can imagine that we are not the only business that does not want employees playing games on the clock.

Kevin,
As I posted, it was a "wild a$$ guess". I don't know why the existence of a DLLCache directory helps in your solution.

The question I have is how did the games get on the machine in the first place? Did the employees install Windows themselves or did they come that way from the manufacturer? If from the manufacturer, you can request (I believe) that games not be installed when you order the PCs. If your employees are doing it, perhaps there is a different path to take.
Larry Miller
MCSD
LWMiller3@verizon.net

Accumulate learning by study, understand what you learn by questioning. -- Mingjiao
Previous
Next
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform