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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAM
Password for usb interface on D700
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<blockquote data-quote="user name" data-source="post: 289672" data-attributes="member: 1719"><p>Are you using Chrome? open the <strong>Settings</strong> link from the main menu and choose <strong>Show advanced settings</strong>. Click <strong>Manage passwords</strong> to bring up a list.</p><p>If there are a lot of entries here, use the search box to look for part of a URL. You can then click on an entry and select <strong>Show</strong> to see the password—Chrome will prompt you for the username associated with your Windows or Mac account to prove you are who you say you are before showing the password.</p><p></p><p>If Firefox is your browser of choice, choose <strong>Options</strong> then <strong>Options</strong> from the menu. Switch to <strong>Security</strong> and click the button marked <strong>Saved Passwords</strong> to bring up the database. Again, you can search for entries or simply scroll down the list. Click <strong>Show Passwords</strong> to reveal your login information. Anyone you can sit down at your computer can go through the same process, which is another good reason to protect your OS user account with a password.</p><p> </p><p>Internet Explorer...You need to head to Control Panel, then search for "Credential Manager"—click <strong>Manage Web Credentials </strong>when the results appear on screen. Expand the entry of the site you want to look at and choose <strong>Show</strong> next to the starred out password. You'll be prompted for your Windows user account password as an extra level of security, and if you can prove your identity then the password will be displayed on screen.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="user name, post: 289672, member: 1719"] Are you using Chrome? open the [B]Settings[/B] link from the main menu and choose [B]Show advanced settings[/B]. Click [B]Manage passwords[/B] to bring up a list. If there are a lot of entries here, use the search box to look for part of a URL. You can then click on an entry and select [B]Show[/B] to see the password—Chrome will prompt you for the username associated with your Windows or Mac account to prove you are who you say you are before showing the password. If Firefox is your browser of choice, choose [B]Options[/B] then [B]Options[/B] from the menu. Switch to [B]Security[/B] and click the button marked [B]Saved Passwords[/B] to bring up the database. Again, you can search for entries or simply scroll down the list. Click [B]Show Passwords[/B] to reveal your login information. Anyone you can sit down at your computer can go through the same process, which is another good reason to protect your OS user account with a password. Internet Explorer...You need to head to Control Panel, then search for "Credential Manager"—click [B]Manage Web Credentials [/B]when the results appear on screen. Expand the entry of the site you want to look at and choose [B]Show[/B] next to the starred out password. You'll be prompted for your Windows user account password as an extra level of security, and if you can prove your identity then the password will be displayed on screen. [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAM
Password for usb interface on D700
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