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Our Rating. Price when reviewed. Specifications Net Nanny. Net Nanny's interface is slick and intuitive. Read more Reviews. The ONLY way to reverse a hard brick is to take it to a service center. Hindi ka makakapag Recovery Mode, Fastboot or any types of warm booting, kasi kapag 'hard brick' sira na ang bootloader, which means dead hardware, dead device in general.

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But the Kohan that survived the last Cataclysm recognize the thunderhead brewing in the distance. Parents get lots of detail, but repeatedly installing the apps over annoy kids. Typical Time Control Like most parental control systems Net Nanny offers a weekly schedule grid that defines when the kids are allowed on the Internet. Norton simplifies this to a single time-span for weekdays and for weekends. Net Nanny can additionally define a daily or weekly maximum. If your child runs out of time before homework is done you can grant a one-time extension without affecting the overall schedule—even if you're away from home.

Norton and Safe Eyes track each user's Internet usage across all household computers. Net Nanny doesn't; a child could theoretically switch to a different computer for more time. Cross-computer scheduling is planned for a future edition.

A simple slider lets parents choose, for example, to allow games rated up to "Teen" but block "Mature" and "Adults only. Net Nanny's list is up to date; my year-old commented, "Hey, that game just came out this month! And the Windows parental control doesn't let you block specific games. E-mail Alerts Net Nanny's e-mail notification system is extremely flexible. You can define any number of alerts for a variety of conditions, each sent to e-mail accounts of your choice, in real time or aggregated into an hourly, daily or weekly report.

For example, you might choose to have real-time alerts sent to work e-mail addresses for both parents when Net Nanny detects a questionable IM conversation, but to get a weekly report of blocked Web sites.

Norton lets you choose which events trigger e-mail notifications and record multiple e-mail addresses, but notification goes out immediately to all listed addresses. Safe Eyes expands on the notification concept by allowing notification via phone or text message, as well as e-mail. But in Safe Eyes there's no option to choose event categories, just a three-position sensitivity setting.

All alerts go out when the sensitivity threshold is reached. As long as e-mail works for you, Net Nanny's approach is the most flexible. Each report starts with one or more high-level charts. For example, the Web activity report includes a pie chart of Web categories visited; a bar chart of sites allowed, blocked, or blocked with override; a bar chart of user Web activity; and a graph of daily Web activity.

The reports are all interactive, open to drilling down for detail. For example, clicking a category slice in the pie chart gets a list of users who've visited sites in that category and clicking a user names gets a list of those sites.

You can easily view data for the last day, week, fortnight, month, or any date range. By default, report data is stored both locally and online, so you can view it remotely whether or not the children's computer is on. The reports look and act the same, whether viewed online or locally. They can simply request access or they can ask to change the page's category locally.

This exception request triggers an e-mail notification to you, the parent, and you can remotely accept or reject the request in real time. Like CyberPatrol, Net Nanny offers an optional "instant override" feature. If you choose to enable this feature for older children and give them the override password, they can proceed to a blocked site by supplying the password.

Of course, the override event is logged, and you can receive an e-mail notification. If you're usually at hand when the kids are on the computer, you could enable override without giving them the password. Though it isn't aimed at workplace use as much as CyberPatrol is, Net Nanny can definitely be used to keep employees focused on work-related sites. It even lets you choose, on a category-by-category basis, simply to warn users who stray into an inappropriate category and let them choose to back out or continue, knowing their actions will be logged.

It doesn't always work, but in many cases you'll reach the site just as always. And if it's a porn site, this trick will get past almost every parental-control filter, because such filters can't process secure sites. Worse, a clever child who manages to route all surfing through a secure proxy site will have unrestricted Internet access. That's why most parental-control products include a category to block access to such proxy sites.

Net Nanny can block proxies, but it has a second line of defense: It filters both secure and nonsecure traffic. If the Proxy category isn't blocked or if your child manages to find an unblocked proxy, Net Nanny still does its job. This is highly unusual: I haven't seen any other product with this level of control. Here's another nice feature: Net Nanny keeps Google's SafeSearch feature turned on, to keep the kids from coming up with nasty results from a nice search.

And it doesn't stop with Google. I did run into a little problem with Net Nanny's blocking and Google's suggested search terms feature. Suppose I want to search for an online pharmacy. As soon as I type "online p" the block dialog appears to say I've been prevented from viewing a Gambling site. The problem is that "online poker" appeared in the list of suggestions. If this becomes a problem you can always click Override or switch to one of the other blocking styles; this problem turns up only when you use the blocking dialog.

For each user, you can create a weekly schedule in half-hour increments that defines when Internet access is permitted. As with most parental-control products, Net Nanny has a handy grid that lets you edit the schedule by clicking and dragging with the mouse. The current grid is more attractive and convenient than the split grid found in the last version. Webroot and CyberPatrol can additionally schedule use of specific programs, and Webroot can schedule overall computer use separately from Internet use.

Net Nanny also supports a daily or weekly cap on Internet access. It doesn't go as far as CyberPatrol, which allows a separate cap for each day of the week. The kids can't break out of the schedule by tweaking the system time, because, like Safe Eyes, Net Nanny gets its time from the Internet.

Webroot and Bsafe can be fooled by kids who tweak the system clock; CyberPatrol too, to some extent. Previously, there was no option to override the time schedule other than having a parent open the administrator console and change the underlying schedule. The current version extends the instant-override option to the time-control system. Net Nanny plans to allow overriding the schedule for a specific duration, but at present the override lasts for as long as the browser remains open.

The program doesn't log or report time schedule overrides, though you can configure it to send an e-mail alert. Net Nanny's IM monitoring is nothing short of phenomenal. At the simplest level, Net Nanny can block access to any of the supported IM protocols. The client programs will still run; they just won't be able to communicate. Bsafe and Safe Eyes offer to block specific IM clients, but, as they don't block at the protocol level, kids can evade them by using third-party clients.



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