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We're doing this with our visitor self-signin. A set of web pages (powered by AS/400 ^_^) prompts for the visitor's name, company, who they're visiting, etc. If the visitor has never been at our facility before, they are shown a PowerPoint presentation (safety/orientation). Then a label is printed with their information and bar code (for signing out). All this runs on a "publicly accessible" PC in the foyer. It is quite a task to only allow certain things to happen, but prevent others. What we ended up doing is upgrading the box to Windows XP and instituting group policies. Group policy is a godsend in a kiosk situation where you want extremely tight control over IE and general box functions. We have an "autologon" script set on the machine, and the only allowed functions are IE and multimedia events (for the PowerPoint). IE runs in full screen mode with many things turned off (close window, no menus, no Start button, etc). I agree that IE kiosk mode isn't really "useful" for public internet use, but for internal kiosk applications, web "presentations", etc., it is very nice. Loyd On Thu, 28 Aug 2003 13:22:28 -0700, "Eyers, Daniel" <daniel.eyers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >I'm really interested in why you would want to do this... I would suspect >there may reasons to do it as part of an >intranet site, maybe... Out in the wild, I think you'd get a lot of push back. > >Sites that do that to me on the Internet get a swift F11 or Alt-F4. Or an End >Task; they never get my $$$. > >But I'd like to hear another viewpoint... I want to understand why folks do >that.... > >thanks (looking forward to your reply) > >dan -- Mediocrity: It takes a lot less time and most people won't notice the difference until it's too late. <http://www.despair.com/> loyd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx ICQ#504581 http://www.blackrobes.net/
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