Recommended Posts

You obviously don't watch much news. Perhaps this is an inner-city school.

Most schools I have done work in have CCTV outside the building, in the cafeterias and usually pointing at the doors accessing the computer labs. I haven't seen one inside the classroom though.

There's going to be no record of when or who removed the drive. The best thing you could do is set an example. Remove all the drives and explain to each class as to why the privilege was removed. Perhaps an witness to the theft will come forward.

One thing I've failed to see mentioned here. CCTV cameras don't mean much. My apartment has them on every floor and where I work has at least 15 (that I have counted) in the building. The problem is the storage required for these systems. I know at work they don't store more than 3 days because of the space required. My apartment only stores about 2 days of video for the same reason. Not sure if it's even worth the time to try and investigate for what is probably only a $15 part these days. Guess it depends on what your time is worth. My high school learned quite quickly that optical drives were pointless to install as they failed rather quickly due to the abuse they took. Finally they got smart and ran most things from the server over the network. I'm not trying to say that you just ignore theft from your computer labs but if you want to discourage it you need to look into better solutions (locking cases, Citrix servers, dedicated CCTV system for that lab....). Don't rely on and event log as it can be misleading. People do forget to logout. Seeing who the last user on may not necessarily be the user that did the crime. Event logs can also be forged so I seriously wouldn't rely on it. Rather than waste time and money trying to figure out who did it I'd suggest redirecting that time and money into a better way to control and monitor that computer lab. In the long run it would probably save you money and headache.

  • 3 weeks later...
All of the gangs are moving over to the Porter County because they don't like what they did to Gary. Schools are getting really bad in my area.

Up until I read that, I thought "I blame Gary" was refering to a person. I thought it was a tad harsh blaming one guy!

What's the naming convention on the network? If users are logging in as themselves or a unique ID, you can check the Security logs for the last time someone logged in since the drive has gone (you should see them logging on, or shutting down the computer).

What's the naming convention on the network? If users are logging in as themselves or a unique ID, you can check the Security logs for the last time someone logged in since the drive has gone (you should see them logging on, or shutting down the computer).

whos to say the machine wasn't used afterwards?

my old school had a Novell network, XP Pro VLK clients, and 70% of the library's DVD/CD-RW drives busted. i noticed that the sysop there had replaced a few of them with old CD-ROMs but i think she gave up.

there is a security camera in the lobby, thats about it. i think i nabbed about 15 XP Pro COAs AND the volume license key they were using. (i am not as innocent as i may lead people to believe :()

about the DVD being important: if it was in a classroom, where the teacher made use of a CD-based teaching materials, i could see it being important. or in a library of a school who's Spanish course passes out DVDs to every student taking Spanish. the drives become very important and teachers/students get pretty tense when they can't do what they want when they want to.

$15 isn't alot, but say you have that happen to 10 machines. thats $150 + time to obtain and install the replacement. on top of whatever else the little ******* did.

  • 3 weeks later...
whos to say the machine wasn't used afterwards?

my old school had a Novell network, XP Pro VLK clients, and 70% of the library's DVD/CD-RW drives busted. i noticed that the sysop there had replaced a few of them with old CD-ROMs but i think she gave up.

there is a security camera in the lobby, thats about it. i think i nabbed about 15 XP Pro COAs AND the volume license key they were using. (i am not as innocent as i may lead people to believe :()

about the DVD being important: if it was in a classroom, where the teacher made use of a CD-based teaching materials, i could see it being important. or in a library of a school who's Spanish course passes out DVDs to every student taking Spanish. the drives become very important and teachers/students get pretty tense when they can't do what they want when they want to.

$15 isn't alot, but say you have that happen to 10 machines. thats $150 + time to obtain and install the replacement. on top of whatever else the little ******* did.

OK again I hate to say it but your fighting a loosing battle. I'm sorry JMann but you obviously haven't dealt with network or even machine security before. Simply looking at who the last user was in no way means that's who swiped the drive. All it takes is someone to come in, power off the system, yank the drive and your gone. Anyone with a working brain would know that and also know there is no way to track it by relying on system logs. The only possible useful info those may tell you is approx what time the device went missing and that's only providing they weren't smart enough to get into the BIOS and muck with the system time. Now this small problem aside...

Are you guys seriously running full systems where anyone can install anything and royally muck up the machine? Then you have to pay a tech (In my experience even so called computer teachers are by no means techs) to fix/reinstall the system..??? Honestly. Get rid of the CD/DVD ROM drives as they are not neaded, give each student a bit of storage on the server and a floppy drive if they want to take things home, and make the systems thin clients. Less headache. If you MUST have an HD with programs installed on each system look into something (it's a bit old but think it's still around) like Deep Freeze (Microsoft makes their own clone of it called Steady State). I haven't yet had the chance to play with Steady State but from what I hear Deep Freeze is still at current better. Heck even Citrix could be a solution to look at. Please tell me you never went with LCD screens but the old CRT as they take WAY more of a beating then the LCD ones. :)

ttyl

Digital

This is why we have removed all cd rom drives from the place of work, and installed cameras in all the labs........

You will be surprised what kids steal!!

Oh I know. Remember when all you pretty much had were the mice with the balls in them? I've seen kids even steal those (the ball out of the mouse). What the heck they would want those for is beyond me.

try going to eventvwr, looking at system log, and then filtering by "cdrom" not sure if it will work...I just tried it, and no results came back....but then again I haven't taken my bluray drive out either.

try going to eventvwr, looking at system log, and then filtering by "cdrom" not sure if it will work...I just tried it, and no results came back....but then again I haven't taken my bluray drive out either.

It's not likely to show up if you filter it by cdrom.

Oh I know. Remember when all you pretty much had were the mice with the balls in them? I've seen kids even steal those (the ball out of the mouse). What the heck they would want those for is beyond me.

Try and bounce it around, throw it, play football with it. The kids were probably just bored.

A lot of Sysadmins used to glue the twisty bit to stop it happening :laugh:

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Frankly, I blame whoever is writing such articles. "A big improvement/update and/or new feature is now available to everyone! Also, use this unofficial tweak tool to enable it because it actually isn't available to you yet officially and might not in fact even be entirely ready or whatever, hence why it is perhaps not enabled for you*. But it's great and you should enable it!" I mean there's nothing wrong with sharing info about some feature you might need to enable via unofficial means, of course. It's just that these articles tend to essentially end up being two news pieces in one, and one of them tends to be a bit misleading. (*Yes, yes, the "it's a controlled rollout!" thing. Not a fan of that one either. The argument, not the actual rollout.)
    • Thank you. Will do. I read in the release notes that editor config might be at play here.
    • Actually, I think even Microsoft doesn't know how to control it
    • OpenAI is making Codex more useful in Chrome and the cloud by Pradeep Viswanathan OpenAI's Codex now has more than 5 million users, up nearly 4x from earlier this year. To further accelerate Codex's growth among developers, OpenAI today announced that it has agreed to acquire Ona, a company that builds secure cloud execution and orchestration technology for developers. Ona will enable developers to run Codex with persistent and controlled cloud infrastructure for long-running agentic workflows. Right now, most Codex execution happens locally on developers' laptops and PCs, and the agents work continuously for hours. Through Ona, OpenAI aims to make Codex agents keep working for days without being tied to a user’s local machine or an active session. This will be an important capability for enterprises that want to deploy AI agents in production while maintaining control over infrastructure, data, security boundaries, credential scope, logging, and review workflows. Like any acquisition, the deal is still subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals. Until the deal closes, OpenAI and Ona will continue to operate as separate companies. After closing, Ona’s team will join the Codex team to improve developer workflows. Alongside the Ona acquisition announcement, OpenAI today introduced a few Codex updates. Developers can now save Codex rate limit resets and use them later instead of losing them when they are not needed immediately. OpenAI is also adding a referral option where users can invite a friend to Codex and get a saved rate limit reset. OpenAI today also announced a developer mode for browser use in Chrome and the Codex in-app browser. With this mode, Codex can use the Chrome DevTools Protocol to debug web apps, inspect pages, and work more directly with browser-based development workflows. Developers can use this when they want Codex to profile JavaScript, inspect console output and network traffic, examine web page states including the DOM and applied styles, and more.
    • Camtasia 2026.1.3 by Razvan Serea TechSmith Camtasia is the complete professional solution for high-quality screen recording, video editing and sharing. Camtasia 2026 makes editing your videos easier, and faster than ever. The new editor is packed with enhanced video processing, all-new production technology, an innovative library, and stock videos and other creative assets to help you create more polished, professional videos. No video experience needed. Anyone can create informative, engaging videos. Create professional, eye-catching videos: Add special video effects - Apply Behaviors that are perfectly designed to animate your text, images, or icons. Get a crisp, polished look without being a professional video editor. Drag-and-drop your edits - What you see is what you get. Every effect and element in your video can be dropped and edited directly in the preview window. And you can edit at resolutions up to beautiful 4K, for clear video at any size. Get exceptional performance - Camtasia takes full advantage of your computer’s processor with 64-bit performance. You’ll get fast rendering times and enhanced stability—even on your most complex projects. Camtasia 2026.1.3 changelog: Feature Updates Improved keyboard navigability in tool panels. Improved screen reader accessibility of headings in Preferences. Tool panels can now be resized using a keyboard-navigable control. Updated color of folder icon in User Library tab for better visibility. Grouped media now render a composite waveform considering all audio media within that group. Added Long Path Aware to the manifest of Editor and Recorder. Performance Improvements Improved performance for editing groups on the timeline. Improved the project loading performance when timeline has lots of trec media with cursor data. Updates for IT Administrators Updated cpp-httplib from 0.38.0 to 0.43.3. Updated expat from 2.7.4 to 2.8.0. Updated freetype from 2.13.3 to 2.14.3. Updated harfbuzz from 13.0.1 to 14.2.0. Updated libpng16 from 1.6.55 to 1.6.58. Updated pango from 1.57.0 to 1.57.1. Updated girepository from 2.86.3 to 2.88.0. Updated pcre2-posix from 10.47.0 to 12.0.2. Added new harfbuzz-gpu.dll. Updated FFmpeg from 7.1.1 to 7.1.2. Updated aom from 3.11.0 to 3.13.1. Updated dav1d from 1.5.0 to 1.5.1. Updated ogg from 1.3.5 to 1.3.6. Updated SDL2 from 2.32.4 to 2.32.10. Updated zlib from 1.3.1 to 1.3.2. Updated Nalpeiron binaries to version 4.4.69.3. Bug Fixes Fixed an issue which prevented some user submitted crash reports from being sent. Fixed a potential memory leak when decoding HEVC or VP9 video. Fixed a potential crash when trying to delete a range selection on a magnetic track. Fixed a bug with the Properties Panel showing stale properties when only a caption is selected on the timeline. Fixed an issue that could prevent the Opacity and Blur properties from being changed in the Background Removal effect. Fixed an issue where larger Camtasia online projects may fail to open in Camtasia Editor. Table of contents thumbnails are no longer created for Smart Player exports with no table of contents. Fix resetting skew revert to revert just skew and not scale as well. Fixed editing in Snagit with snagX file with Unicode characters. Fixed a bug where grouped visual media could be cropped in some cases. Fixed importing SnagX files with Unicode characters. Localization fixes. Download: Camtasia 2026.1.3 | 309.0 MB (Shareware) View: Camtasia Homepage | Tutorials | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Jamswaz earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Jamswaz earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      Marzoid went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Community Regular
      coch went up a rank
      Community Regular
    • One Year In
      slackerzz earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      511
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      188
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      157
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      83
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!