[Ion]
WCG Team Assistant
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2009
- Messages
- 13,391 (2.38/day)
- Location
- Raleigh, North Carolina, United States
System Name | Niedersachsen / Ribe / Minsk |
---|---|
Processor | i3 3240 / i7-3520M / 4x Opteron 6376 @ 2.86GHz |
Motherboard | BIOSTAR H61M / HP Q77 / Supermicro H8QG7 |
Cooling | Stock / Stock / 4x 1U G34 |
Memory | 1x8GB / 2x4GB / 4x4GB |
Video Card(s) | GTX260 / Intel HD 4000 / nVidia GT310 |
Storage | 80GB Intel SSD / 256GB Intel SSD / 2x 60GB SSD (RAID1) |
Display(s) | Dell 3007 + HP 2245w / 12.1" 1366x768 / None |
Case | Antec NSK3480 / HP / Supermicro 1U |
Audio Device(s) | Onboard |
Power Supply | Enermax 500W / HP 130W / Supermicro Gold 1400W |
Keyboard | IBM Model M |
Software | Windows 7 (Niedersachsen/Ribe) / Linux Mint 17.2 (Minsk) |
You can easily change the PW at any time--I did so when I handed out my credentials to my friend when setting up WCG on the 2700k I'm loaning her.Yeah, that's the one thing I would need some guidance on. Obviously I don't want someone to have access to my home network. Even if I completely trust everyone here, there's the chance they could get hacked and then the hacker would have access to my machines.
But I'm open to the idea if it can be done securely and access can be controlled on my end - maybe via a virtual machine or something like that. I'd prefer to have the winner's login info and set the machine up natively so that I could watch it on boincstats though. My thought here was that people could just change their passwords before and then back afterwards, but I went to look and I'm not sure if that's possible with WCG - do you know? If it's not, then I can understand how this would be a problem.