My dad is currently running Windows 7. I thought he would be fare better with it, but somehow he got malware installed on it by visiting a website. After the hundredth time of cleaning up his system over the years, I decided to take advantage of Win 7's easy to use user access control.
I switched his account to a Standard User. I figured if he ever gets his profile corrupted with malware, then I can simply delete it using an Admin account and create him a new account. If Win 7 really prevents Standard Users from wrecking havoc to the entire OS, then I think this is a good solution.
I only have one issue, though. He has a program that always ask for the Admin password to run. I'm not giving him the Admin password, so the current work around is that he cannot use the program. Apparently, there is no way to allow the program to run properly under a Standard User account without prompting for the Admin password.
Is there an easier way to handle this?
The only option I can think of right now is running VMWare Workstation on his machine and just re-create another Win 7 instance if he corrupts the current one. But the price tag of $189 is pretty hefty. I've also read that there are such things as application containers that allow a program to run in its own space without affecting the rest of the OS. But I can't seem to find any products for it.
Any other suggestions?
I switched his account to a Standard User. I figured if he ever gets his profile corrupted with malware, then I can simply delete it using an Admin account and create him a new account. If Win 7 really prevents Standard Users from wrecking havoc to the entire OS, then I think this is a good solution.
I only have one issue, though. He has a program that always ask for the Admin password to run. I'm not giving him the Admin password, so the current work around is that he cannot use the program. Apparently, there is no way to allow the program to run properly under a Standard User account without prompting for the Admin password.
Is there an easier way to handle this?
The only option I can think of right now is running VMWare Workstation on his machine and just re-create another Win 7 instance if he corrupts the current one. But the price tag of $189 is pretty hefty. I've also read that there are such things as application containers that allow a program to run in its own space without affecting the rest of the OS. But I can't seem to find any products for it.
Any other suggestions?