pradeep1
Golden Member
Hello Everyone,
I need some help. Over the past year, I have been helping my local Boys & Girls Club build out their computer lab. This little lab now contains about 12 computers, and they were mostly built using parts purchased from / donated by members of this forum. (Thanks!).
The computers are standardized on Windows 2000 Professional and have on them virus protection (Norton) and Spyware protection (AdAware, Spybot, Spywareblaster, MS Anti-spyware beta, Spyware Guard).
About 100-150 kids use the computers daily, and they mostly use them for completing class assignments, surfing the internet, playing internet games, etc. Not much heavy use.
After a few months, I noticed that whenever I went back to the BGC, the teachers there would complain about certain computers not working. Everytime I go back, I notice that at least 30% are not operational. These machines range in power from Athlon XP 1700+ machines with 512 MB RAM for the high end, to 600 MHz Celerons with 256 MB RAM for the low end.
The problem with these computers are that these kids download everything and anything in sight and install them on the machines. I brought one of the higher end machines to work on and after running a virus and spyware scan, found something like 200+ spyware programs running, and maybe 2-3 virus infections. Granted, this was a worst case of the lot.
So here is what I'd like to do:
1. Lock down all the PCs so they can be used for only a limited set of things:
a) Surf the Internet
b) Work on Word, Excel, Powerpoint
c) Run educational software titles that the teacher(s) install
2. Prevent the kids from changing the wallpaper, taskbar settings, internet settings, etc.
3. Prevent installation of spyware, IM and chatting software, downloadable games, etc.
4. Make it simple for the teachers to maintain these machines. The teachers are basically computer technically illiterate, and the kids can swim circles around them.
5. Do this with incurring additional software costs, since we have no budget for this.
One thought...install some type of rollback software. What it should do is take a snapshot of the baseline install that I put on these machines and roll back everything each time the computers is started. Sort of like a re-ghosting of the hard drive each time the computer starts. Nothing gets retained, everything is reset back to the way it was, and no more problems.
Your thoughts and suggestions would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Pradeep
I need some help. Over the past year, I have been helping my local Boys & Girls Club build out their computer lab. This little lab now contains about 12 computers, and they were mostly built using parts purchased from / donated by members of this forum. (Thanks!).
The computers are standardized on Windows 2000 Professional and have on them virus protection (Norton) and Spyware protection (AdAware, Spybot, Spywareblaster, MS Anti-spyware beta, Spyware Guard).
About 100-150 kids use the computers daily, and they mostly use them for completing class assignments, surfing the internet, playing internet games, etc. Not much heavy use.
After a few months, I noticed that whenever I went back to the BGC, the teachers there would complain about certain computers not working. Everytime I go back, I notice that at least 30% are not operational. These machines range in power from Athlon XP 1700+ machines with 512 MB RAM for the high end, to 600 MHz Celerons with 256 MB RAM for the low end.
The problem with these computers are that these kids download everything and anything in sight and install them on the machines. I brought one of the higher end machines to work on and after running a virus and spyware scan, found something like 200+ spyware programs running, and maybe 2-3 virus infections. Granted, this was a worst case of the lot.
So here is what I'd like to do:
1. Lock down all the PCs so they can be used for only a limited set of things:
a) Surf the Internet
b) Work on Word, Excel, Powerpoint
c) Run educational software titles that the teacher(s) install
2. Prevent the kids from changing the wallpaper, taskbar settings, internet settings, etc.
3. Prevent installation of spyware, IM and chatting software, downloadable games, etc.
4. Make it simple for the teachers to maintain these machines. The teachers are basically computer technically illiterate, and the kids can swim circles around them.
5. Do this with incurring additional software costs, since we have no budget for this.
One thought...install some type of rollback software. What it should do is take a snapshot of the baseline install that I put on these machines and roll back everything each time the computers is started. Sort of like a re-ghosting of the hard drive each time the computer starts. Nothing gets retained, everything is reset back to the way it was, and no more problems.
Your thoughts and suggestions would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Pradeep