Originally posted by: yukichigai
Originally posted by: pcgeek11
Originally posted by: yukichigai
The Timecard software is actually on a 2k server, and run on the 2k server via network share. (It's really quite bizzare) It doesn't matter what the time on the server says, it pays attention the system times on the individual workstations. It'd be nice if we could upgrade them all to 2k+, but we can't.
I guess It makes it quite convenient for the employees to just come in whenever they want change the time on the PC clock in and then set it back to the correct time. I wouldn't allow a windows 98 machine on my business network especially for a timecard machine. Wide open and asking for trouble. It would be easier to set it up to only allow timekeeping functions from the Win 2K machines than to attempt to safegard the Win98 machines.
pcgeek11
This is a "bottom line" situation; even if it requires purchasing some bit of outside software it's
still going to be cheaper than upgrading all the 98 workstations to 2k.
To reiterate: the solution is not "upgrade to 2k". There is nothing you can possibly say that will convince me, or more accurately my boss, that upgrading to 2k is prefferable to finding a way to prevent clock changes on the existing systems.