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Dragon NaturallySpeaking 12 Administrator Guide - Nuance

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Chapter 6: Configuring and using the Roaming feature and Roaming User Profiles<br />

n By department<br />

n By alphabetical groupings (for example A through H, I through M, N through R, and S through<br />

Z)<br />

On each PC, you can configure any number of Roaming User Profile locations. Make sure you<br />

give each Roaming User Profile location a display name that makes it clear to your end-users<br />

which location to choose from.<br />

Controlling access to User Profiles<br />

If you have multiple <strong>Dragon</strong> end-users on an end-user workstation, those end-users will have multiple<br />

User Profiles to choose from in <strong>Dragon</strong>'s Open User Profile dialog box.<br />

If you use a shared directory for User Profiles, whether they are roaming or non-roaming, you may<br />

be concerned about the ability of an end-user to see and/or open another end-user’s profile as<br />

well as their ability to open the correct profile. There are several ways to address this concern:<br />

n Many of <strong>Nuance</strong>’s customers address this concern simply through end-user training. Each enduser<br />

should be aware that if they open another end-user’s profile and try to use it, their accuracy<br />

will be poor and end-user-specific customizations will not be available. Therefore, each enduser<br />

has an incentive to use only their own profile. However, this fact does not prevent a<br />

malicious end-user from damaging another end-user’s profile.<br />

n If end-users always log into Windows with a unique Windows user ID, you can use Windows<br />

file permissions to control access to the profiles. Typically, you do this by granting Full Control<br />

or Read/Write/Modify access to the shared directory, but do not allow this permission to<br />

propagate to sub-directories. That way, each end-user becomes the creator owner of any <strong>Dragon</strong><br />

User Profile that he or she creates. End-users can still see all of the <strong>Dragon</strong> User Profiles in the<br />

Open User Profile dialog box, but if they try to select another end-user’s profile, a message will<br />

appear saying that they do not have permission to access that profile. Apply similar file<br />

permissions to the local copy of each Roaming User Profile; the default location for local copies<br />

is under<br />

C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application<br />

Data\<strong>Nuance</strong>\<strong>NaturallySpeaking</strong><strong>12</strong>\RoamingUsers for Windows XP<br />

C:\ProgramData\<strong>Nuance</strong>\<strong>NaturallySpeaking</strong><strong>12</strong>\RoamingUsers for Windows Vista,<br />

Windows 7, and Windows Server 2008.<br />

n If end-users log in using a shared Windows user ID, the best way to control access is through<br />

HTTP Roaming. In this configuration, you set up a web server running either IIS or Apache<br />

and with the WebDAV file system enabled. On each workstation, you specify a URL on the<br />

web server as the Roaming User Profile location. When an end-user launches <strong>Dragon</strong>, before<br />

displaying the Open User Profile dialog it prompts for a user name and password, which it uses<br />

to authenticate against the web server.<br />

You can use file permissions on the web server to specify which User Profiles are accessible to<br />

each account on the web server. File security is a function of the web server and the WebDAV<br />

software.<br />

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