Hi Ol - Let me try hereLerytha wrote:1. Does anyone know how I can log on as an administrator to my own computer, of which I thought I was an administrator anyway? Weird.
2. In case the first question is answered, but the mudconnector advice is incorrect, does anyone else have any idea how I can turn my firewall off? There doesn't seem to be an option to do so!
3. In case neither of the above work (and I can't approach the university, because if they were to say "no, you're not allowed" then any creative way I manage to work out to log on would then be knowingly incriminating, rather than unknowingly), does anyone else have any other possible solutions?
Missing my only MUD.
1) Is this your own laptop, or one provided by the school? Does it log in automatically when you start it up? To try:
Click on Start > Log Off > Log Off
Hold Control-Alt-Delete until a login box appears
In the user: box, enter "administrator"
In the password: box, enter whatever you are using as your password; if this is a Uni computer, that's not going to work. In that case you would need to find out what the secret password is that your IT folks at the Uni use. At my place, asking will get it, but that's not universal.
If this doesn't work, you may need to shut down and turn your computer back on again to get back in.
I would advise posting or linking to what the web would have you do to fix the problem, before doing it, so some cognescenti can have a look at it before you do it. Not every "fix" that allows you to do what you want to do is a good one! (Like turning off your firewall entirely!)
2) There are several ways, but you will want to unblock JUST the ports that FK uses. However, similar to what Japcil describes above, you'll want to check that it is your computer, and not the university, that's doing the blocking. Both your own computer and the university have firewalls. Once you have 1) figured out, let us know and we can lead you through adding a port permission to your own machine's firewall.
3) There are several relay sites out there, where you point your machine to an "allowed" address, and then they send your information to the "unallowed" place you want to go. They slow everything down, though (middlemen!), so they would be a last resort.
We'll get you there, Ol!