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Question:

How do I make a single icon on my desktop require a password to access it?

Since I have to share a computer with someone who is slightly more than sneaky, I want to know if there is any way that I can make an icon secure through properties (or other ways) without having to change the User Login completely. I have changed the actual icon to something else and renamed it while disguising a shutdown virus with the original but somehow or another my friend always comes across my things. I have another User ID but it is so much easier not to have to sign into it all the time. Everything is in the shared folders so when he downloads something it shows up in both desktops and vice versa. Is there anyway I can get the specific file I want, which happens to be an internet browser, to only work on MY User Login? Does anyone have any idea what I am talking about? Please respond clearly and in extensive detail. I have asked questions in the past that have been met with VERY vague answers. Thank you for your time,~A~

Answer:

install AVG free antivirus, it will probably remove the virus.
So your finished point is 774. what's your strive against point? in case you're especially extreme then make investments it in greater tradeskills and earn greater money, sustain for a Whip or maybe a Barrows set, basically generic extreme-end equipment. Or, in case you're a extreme point, you need to spend a number of it on Prayer potions to raid the Barrows, or in case you're insanely solid at Runescape attempt raiding God Wars.
You are on exactly the right track if you were guessing damage caused by taking the bumps too fast. The car's suspension system was designed to absorb the jarring effect of rough roadways. The stiffer the suspension, the more you feel the bumps. If a person is speeding over speedbumps, they are forcing the suspension to work overtime to compensate for the bump. If a speedbump is shaped just right, it could cause dents in the oil pan, muffler, undercarriage, etc. I have personally seen cars with bent frames due to taking bumps and potholes too fast. It is a physics problem: try to make the moving parts move to fast or in a way they were not designed to move, they will break or bend and your car is toast after awhile. Not something that some people think about
and if more people had common sense and maybe taught that roads aren't for playing on, we wouldn't need speedbumps in the first place

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