Can Office Mobile in TD2 open Password Protected Office Documents - Touch Diamond2, Pure General

Hello All,
I tried to open one excel file, which have password to open, but the Office mobile 6.1 could not open that. Doe sthis mean the Office mobile 6.1 does not support this feature?
Any other way to open such documents in WM?
Thanks.

No, Office Mobile can't open password protected documents.

Open a document in the full-fat app on your workstation, remove password protection, send new document to mobile device.
Not secure, but the only way to go about it.

Thanks all for the reply.
So it is very BAD that MS Office for WM cant open Password protected files .
Is there any other way that we can protect our files in WM?
I think there is one option to encrypt the SD Card where the contect can only be opened in this device and a hard reset also will not allow the device to open the contents.
But is there any other way to have similar kind of password protection for office documents?

Related

Where is Pocket Access?

I try to synchronize a small Access Database with the device. The data is copied and the file is visible, but there seems to be no program to open it with on the Qtek. There should be Pocket Access on the device, but I can't find it.
Any ideas?
Thanks,
Guido
they removed both pocket access and pocket powerpoint from pda's as default along time agoe
think they can be bougth though

APP Request : printing

Hello, the more I use my PDA to emulate a PC experience, the more i deplore the missing print function in all applications.
Often I find myself in need to print an email, its attachment or any other file.
Does anyone feel like me we need to be able to print anywhere ? (like on the new Nokia's for instance)
yea here too, this is something we used to have in the old pocket pc & windows ce but not sure if there is anything available for windows 6.x.
anyone have any info??
How about JetCet Print?
Jetcet and a BT equipped Canon I80 printer works great with winmobile 6.1. Prints email or files including pictures and pdf
HP ePrint
Hi all,
Try the newest HP ePrint enabled printers: from any device you can just send an email with the document attached (picture, MS Office document, web page) directly to the printer's email address. Both message's body and attachement are automatically printed by the printer connected to internet.
No software is needed on device and works from any phone/OS.
Regards,
Radu

How to open Excel password protected file?

Hello
When i try to open Excel password protected file nothing happening. Do you have information how i can make it ?
kmeta said:
Hello
When i try to open Excel password protected file nothing happening. Do you have information how i can make it ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi,
I believe that you cannot do this on the standard Mobile Office product that comes with the HD2. Documents to Go says that it does this (at a cost). The web site is at:
http://www.dataviz.com/products/documentstogo/winmobile/dxtgwms_comparison.html
An internet search (or perhaps even a search of this site) might uncover other apps for you.
I guess it depends on if you are creating the original password protected file on your computer or not (encrypted memory card with password authetication on your device may mean that you don't feel you need to store password protected files on your device - Office password protection is not diffucult to crack anyway).
Regards.

[Q] Password manager for IE Mobile ?

Hi,
I have a HD2 (Windows Mobile 6.5), and sometimes I use Internet Explorer. But, I cannot find a way to store passwords to log in into different sites.
Is a password manager included and can it be activated? Or, do I need to install additional software? Can someone recommend freeware program? Thank you.
I used to use Keepass.
http://keepasssd.sourceforge.net/
Desktop and windows mobile client. I can remember that the version of both clients need to be compatible. So make sure to verify that.
Thank you.
I tried KeePass sometime ago. KeePass seemed to be a little complex, and I don't understand why destop and mobile versions must be compatible, as I intend to use it only on my HD2.
All I need is IE Mobile asks if the login and the password should be remembered, when I put them, and click on OK, like Opera does... Maybe there is no freeware which adds such a function..

[Guide] LePorte Windows 8 Hack

Hi Guy's/Gal's,
As you may be familiar with my OLD Windows 8 Hack (Blog + Video), and that really wasn't too hard to figure out (since then the last windows release now actually doesn't fix it but makes it obvious how to do it, making it no longer a real hack... However, I have now figured out another one... This one exploits the security in Windows 8 to view a Folders contents and technically edit/open the contents without ever modifying ANY security settings.
You can read a bit more on my Blog (also has a How to video on the TechMeShow on YouTube) or just watch the Video.
Question is, why do I bother with these specific bypasses or point out what may not be useful to some? As a developer, I.T. Prof., and security expert and someone who gets paid to work in Enterprise, this is alarming and is NOT good for the future of Windows 8. They don't take my calls or emails and this information should be open until it gets fixed, plus they don't pay me but I do have other and worse hacks for Windows 8 but I hope I won't have to publicly release them cause I will have to uninstall Windows 8.
Thanks,
Lance
lseidman said:
Hi Guy's/Gal's,
As you may be familiar with my OLD Windows 8 Hack (Blog + Video), and that really wasn't too hard to figure out (since then the last windows release now actually doesn't fix it but makes it obvious how to do it, making it no longer a real hack... However, I have now figured out another one... This one exploits the security in Windows 8 to view a Folders contents and technically edit/open the contents without ever modifying ANY security settings.
You can read a bit more on my Blog (also has a How to video on the TechMeShow on YouTube) or just watch the Video.
Question is, why do I bother with these specific bypasses or point out what may not be useful to some? As a developer, I.T. Prof., and security expert and someone who gets paid to work in Enterprise, this is alarming and is NOT good for the future of Windows 8. They don't take my calls or emails and this information should be open until it gets fixed, plus they don't pay me but I do have other and worse hacks for Windows 8 but I hope I won't have to publicly release them cause I will have to uninstall Windows 8.
Thanks,
Lance
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Dude, you started MMC as Administrator (1:52-1:53)... you didn't bypass anything. :silly:
Since you allowed the program to run as Administrator it can access anything, for example: it also works when you start cmd as admin.
Yeah and in the video the kid gives his other account admin rights. To be secure you don't run as local admin... same in server / client environment. This isn't a hack.
Maybe you should watch from 1:50... No admin command prompt is loaded but say it was for argument sake. You couldn't view or edit the contents via Explorer but Security Template under the same account, it was accessible (couldn't view folder contents or perform any tasks in explorer).
So, if it was an admin account or in the admin user group, it shouldn't have been permitted either way as that's not how folder security is supposed to work or security in general. You have to provide explicit permission to the folder to let a specific user account (even with an account being in the Admin user group) have viewable access or any access, in this examples it plainly shows the flaw in that.
Donny1987 said:
Dude, you started MMC as Administrator (1:52-1:53)... you didn't bypass anything. :silly:
Since you allowed the program to run as Administrator it can access anything, for example: it also works when you start cmd as admin.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What part of the video was this done? Also they're not strictly local, they're associated with LIVE Accounts and logged in via remote desktop (not that that matters at all). This means, I use my LIVE password and email to login to the machine.
ROCOAFZ said:
Yeah and in the video the kid gives his other account admin rights. To be secure you don't run as local admin... same in server / client environment. This isn't a hack.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
that was painful to watch
I see what your saying about folder access, if it doesn't work as admin in explorer then why should it on via the MMC.
but the simple fact remains, unless you have access to admin, you cant access MMC.
if you have access to admin then there is literally nothing I couldn't do to gain access to the correct folders anyway, that is very simple and ive yet to come across any folder I haven't been able to get in to AS ADMIN
Its not a major fail, a slight glitch at best, but only a fail if you the user allows access to your computer with admin rights.
as to accessing app isolated storage data, yes you could manipulate the app via the XMLs, we've been able to do that for years, theres no difference in that respect then analysing a process, and changing settings, memory calls or even injecting DLLs. So im not sure what the story is here, sorry.
lseidman said:
Maybe you should watch from 1:50... No admin command prompt is loaded but say it was for argument sake. You couldn't view or edit the contents via Explorer but Security Template under the same account, it was accessible (couldn't view folder contents or perform any tasks in explorer).
So, if it was an admin account or in the admin user group, it shouldn't have been permitted either way as that's not how folder security is supposed to work or security in general. You have to provide explicit permission to the folder to let a specific user account (even with an account being in the Admin user group) have viewable access or any access, in this examples it plainly shows the flaw in that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've watched the complete clip... you're just not getting it.
You logged on with an admin account, you allowed MMC to make changes to the computer by clicking on Yes.
Therefore you can expand the WindowsApps folder and browse.
When you start Windows Explorer, even when you are logged on with an admin account, it still requires your permission before you can change anything (Just like you clicked on Yes for MMC).
I have just created a new local user on my virtual Windows 8 machine without admin rights and opened MMC, it did not ask me to allow the program to make changes.
I then went to the Security Templates stuff like you did, and voila... I can't expand the folder.
It's not a 'hack' or 'flaw', this behavior is completely normal when you start a program as admin.
I've attached some screen shots so you hopefully understand.
Do me a favor then...
Load up a command prompt, but first you'll need to enable the Administrator account which is disabled on the system. To re-enable obviously go in to MMC and add the snap-in for user account management. Once the admin account is active (remember need to set a password).
Now, in the prompt please type:
%windir%\system32\runas.exe /noprofile /user:administrator "explorer.exe C:\"\Program Files"\WindowsApps"
Once you hit enter, the Windows Explorer will be loaded as "Administrator". Are you able to now view the folder contents logged in and under the authenticated Administrative account? No, unfortunately you can't, it requires you to go through the process with the security tab to provide full control. With MMC it bypassed that whole process, even as Admin (literally).
Maybe my point is a little more clear now, I hope? It doesn't matter if you're authenticated as Administrator or given Administrator privilege in MMC. Explorer still prevents you from viewing the folder contents or edit the folder contents.
Donny1987 said:
I've watched the complete clip... you're just not getting it.
You logged on with an admin account, you allowed MMC to make changes to the computer by clicking on Yes.
Therefore you can expand the WindowsApps folder and browse.
When you start Windows Explorer, even when you are logged on with an admin account, it still requires your permission before you can change anything (Just like you clicked on Yes for MMC).
I have just created a new local user on my virtual Windows 8 machine without admin rights and opened MMC, it did not ask me to allow the program to make changes.
I then went to the Security Templates stuff like you did, and voila... I can't expand the folder.
It's not a 'hack' or 'flaw', this behavior is completely normal when you start a program as admin.
I've attached some screen shots so you hopefully understand.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok, let me put this another way
get access to that folder without giving yourself any admin rights.
If you do that then its a security risk, if you cant then your just highlighting one of the biggest USER fails of all time, a fail that's so epic that it single handily helps turn 10,000s of computers in to bots and that is running their default desktop account as an admin.
lseidman said:
Do me a favor then...
Load up a command prompt, but first you'll need to enable the Administrator account which is disabled on the system. To re-enable obviously go in to MMC and add the snap-in for user account management. Once the admin account is active (remember need to set a password).
Now, in the prompt please type:
%windir%\system32\runas.exe /noprofile /user:administrator "explorer.exe C:\"\Program Files"\WindowsApps"
Once you hit enter, the Windows Explorer will be loaded as "Administrator". Are you able to now view the folder contents logged in and under the authenticated Administrative account? No, unfortunately you can't, it requires you to go through the process with the security tab to provide full control. With MMC it bypassed that whole process, even as Admin (literally).
Maybe my point is a little more clear now, I hope? It doesn't matter if you're authenticated as Administrator or given Administrator privilege in MMC. Explorer still prevents you from viewing the folder contents or edit the folder contents.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As far as I know you cannot start Explorer anymore as administrator, since Windows 7 (maybe even Vista, but I never used it).
In Windows XP when you started a command prompt as admin and then 'explorer.exe /separate' then the explorer was really started as admin, this is no longer working... gotta be new security that Microsoft is using since Vista/7
As dazza9075 said, do the same without being an admin on your machine and then we'll start to use the words 'LePorte hack'

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