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But what experience would you recommend here instead? If 2 programs that require access start 5 minutes apart, do you stop/suspend the first one until another program starts and then show a dialog listing both for a good "experience"? What happens if another doesn't start for a while? Do you show the dialog after a certain time period? How can it see into the future and know what other program you are going to run in order to show the items in a nice neat single-window list?

Or do you show multiple dialog prompts (like in the screenshot) because there is no way of knowing what disparate applications will access at any given time?

My experience of corporate IT (having been a subject of someone else's policies) was to have my machine locked down to the maximum because someone somewhere once ran a random EXE they'd been emailed or downloaded and it contained ransomware and encrypted everything it could access (network servers too). As irritating as it was, what would you do to stop that happening again? It was a developer that ran that...

This includes "professional" users who saw Edge or IE as "the Internet" and would get "IT" to add an ODBC entry for a database server, despite having worked there for 10 years. Most of my colleagues didn't know the difference between a database server and a terminal server. And this included management.

What would you do instead then??




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