> I have a user who wants access to UniDK.  Any particular 
> reasons one way or the other? I do not know enough about the 
> product myself but I know some of you do.  :-)
> He is a beginning power user who wants to try to write pieces 
> of a data warehouse in Java/C.

We use a single user ID for all of our web applications, so I'm not sure
how the security comes into play.  I would hope that if verbs are
restricted for him at the colon prompt, that also works when he connects
with UniObjects for Java or InterCall.

One option is to have him install the Personal Edition locally and play
with that at first.  It comes with the same 'demo' account that the
production version has.  You could even give him the dictionaries and
sample data from your real system.

But keep in mind that once he figures out the client side, unless you
turn off the UniRPC daemon or have the port firewalled, he'll be able to
get in with a valid user ID and password.

Have him join this list and we'll keep an eye on him. ;) 

-- 
Wendy Smoak
Application Systems Analyst, Sr.
ASU IA Information Resources Management
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