You cannot do exactly what you stated that you want - Windows XP does not provide such built-in functionality.
If your hard disk uses the NTFS file system, you can encrypt certain folders - but they will be decrypted on-the-fly when you access them after having logged into your account. No other user will be able to access them and Windows won't ask for a password when accessing them.
Windows XP can treat ZIP files as folders, so if you create a password-protected ZIP file, you'll have to enter a password when accessing the contents of such a "compressed folder". However, Windows XP does not let you specify a password for a compressed folder that you create - you'll have to use third-party software like WinZIP, and you said that you don't want to do that. Plus, the encryption used in ZIP files is not very strong.
There is a free tool from Microsoft that creates a password-protected folder. But it is again something you'll have to install - and it doesn't password-protect any folder you want; it just creates a password-protected folder in MyDocuments.
Finally, there are commercial tools that allow you to password-protect arbitrary folders - but, again, you said that you don't want to install third-party software.
So, you cannot do what you want.
2007-01-03 02:04:32
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answer #1
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answered by Vesselin Bontchev 6
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You need to setup a user account for yourself with password protection.....so you might want a guest login for others using your computer, but utilize a user account that only you use.
Then, within your user accounts "my documents", you can right-mouse-click any folder, select properties, select Sharing, and check the box that says 'make private'. Now, others using this computer (not logged on as you) cannot access these folders...they are encrypted. Your file system must be NTSF...not FAT32 for this feature to work.
2007-01-02 03:21:19
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answer #2
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answered by Kevin 3
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I sympathize including your want to have a toddler yet this may well be a bad, undesirable undesirable concept! Legally: not basically can your pal get fired if caught, in maximum places this may well be a legal. and you're an adjunct. except you want to have a sprint one in reformatory, overlook it. Biologically: there's a reason in vitro fertilization is a low yield proposition: The circumstances do not want impregnation. as a results of fact of this it oftentimes takes countless tries. enable's settle for it - the "prevalent" way of fertilization oftentimes takes a countless tries (on ordinary). Ethically: people who donate sperm do so below very strict circumstances and below the insurance that their genetic fabric would be used wisely. they have an attractive to have that expectation fulfilled. And what could you tell your toddler? That they have been the manufactured from against the regulation? Please re-evaluate.
2016-10-19 08:51:31
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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