Man, the nerve of that guy. Protecting the company machines from installing hardware without his knowledge, and restricting internet access paid for by the company with a policy that he probably was instructed to enforce. Some people!
I believe this only works with apps that are native to Windows, thus integrated into it. Even though Office is a Microsoft app, it is still 3rd party from the perspective of the OS.
That does not completely remove IE from Windows, IE is completely integrated with Windows and truely removing it will completely cripple Windows.So maybe you should learn how your OS works.
Knew it and had used this before o__0when i was about 14...what would be more enlightening would be :"How to surf the web if internet connection is disabled."maybe that would involve some sort of low level instruction, preferably 101010 (binary for 42), being whispered to the cpu.
jiminizerJan 4, 2008
Your comment was poor,First three statements redundant,And not quite Haiku
shreyasvaJan 4, 2008
use firefox
dedpoetJan 4, 2008
Man, the nerve of that guy. Protecting the company machines from installing hardware without his knowledge, and restricting internet access paid for by the company with a policy that he probably was instructed to enforce. Some people!
antdudeJan 6, 2008
Whoops, portable. Too much Portal for me!!
ahughesJan 6, 2008
I believe this only works with apps that are native to Windows, thus integrated into it. Even though Office is a Microsoft app, it is still 3rd party from the perspective of the OS.
theriaaJan 8, 2008
not going to Best Buy is a great way to save a few bucks...
splineclJan 8, 2008
That does not completely remove IE from Windows, IE is completely integrated with Windows and truely removing it will completely cripple Windows.So maybe you should learn how your OS works.
nothingsJan 9, 2009
Knew it and had used this before o__0when i was about 14...what would be more enlightening would be :"How to surf the web if internet connection is disabled."maybe that would involve some sort of low level instruction, preferably 101010 (binary for 42), being whispered to the cpu.