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Leopard Matches Vista's Parental Controls, Parents Win
by , 1:15 PM EST, November 20th, 2007
Vista was ahead of Mac OS X Tiger in the control parents have over their kids' computers. However, Leopard has caught up and matches Vista, according to C|Net on Tuesday. The winner is ... parents.
The settings in the OS, called parental controls, allow the parent, the administrator of the computer, to set policies, access times, site restrictions and view logs of the child's viewing habits. However, Tiger lagged behind Vista in the degree of control. That all changed when Leopard shipped on October 26th.
"The battle to one-up each other in parental controls is only going to benefit consumers," said Chris Swenson, director of software industry analysis at the research firm the NPD Group. "There's really no excuse now for parents not to lock down their PCs for their children."
NPD noted that the sales of parental control software was up more than 47 percent in the first nine months of 2007. Clearly, parents are paying attention to the on-line safety of their children. While Apple and Microsoft have not reported on the utilization of parental controls in Leopard and Vista, that's likely to be a big selling point for the gift giving season. Some think the best way to achieve parental controls is at the OS level.
"Parental controls at the operating system level is really the best way on the family PC," said Anne Collier, co-director a community site for parents and kid safety. "There are more options for the parent and it's seamless, rather than having to install something that may or may not crash the system."
Stefanie Olsen looked at the features of the parental controls in Leopard and Vista and found them to be on par with each other. Each achieves the same with slightly different approaches. However, Vista does offer one edge. It can block PC games based on the game ratings system from the ESRB.
On the other hand, unlike Vista, parents with Leopard can control a child's computer from their own and view logs of activity. "We have a rich set of parental controls that are incredibly easy to use and that give parents the flexibility to decide how to use them and to create a certain experience for their child on the Mac," said Chris Bourdon, senior product line manager for Mac OS.
Whichever system parents chose, it's clear that parental controls are now firmly on the radar of Apple and Microsoft, and that has to give parents a good feeling for the holiday shopping season.
TMO notes that parental controls can only go so far. The intrinsic security of the OS, when the final Website is visited and files downloaded, is an equally important consideration. The consensus is that Leopard is well ahead of Vista on that count.
Observer Comments
Tue Nov 20, 2007 3:08 pm Subject: Sounds like MS Spin
I'm glad to see more parental controls in both of the OSes, but this article looks like what MS writes up when they finally catch up to a Mac advantace.. they find a way to make it look good for everyone (i.e. "Parents win."). We're not used to being on this side of the article (defense, that is), so it's interesting to see once in a while.
I'm of the opinion that parent control should be that parents control what their kids do on computers by teaching not just hand the control to a program. I haven't set any control to my 13 year old daughter, because I show her what she should do and why. It does take some effort from me, but I prefere to be the parent.
QuoteGuest wrote:
I'm of the opinion that parent control should be that parents control what their kids do on computers by teaching not just hand the control to a program. I haven't set any control to my 13 year old daughter, because I show her what she should do and why. It does take some effort from me, but I prefere to be the parent.
Ehhh...
I'm going to teach my kids to not play with matches. I trust them and know they're smart.
But that does NOT all add up to me leaving them alone with matches out on the dining room table!
It doesn't matter how trustworthy they are, they're still kids. Sometimes locking things up makes sense, both in the real world and the virtual one.
QuoteGuest wrote:
seems a bit unfair to compare vista to tiger. maybe they should compare win xp to tiger and see how xp's parental controls works out.
Or maybe they should compare Vista to Leopard...oh, wait. That's what they DID do.
QuoteSmall White Car wrote:
<snip>
I'm going to teach my kids to not play with matches. I trust them and know they're smart.
But that does NOT all add up to me leaving them alone with matches out on the dining room table!
First the disclaimer - I don't have kids and so I haven't had to be a parent.
That said however, how many of us grew up in homes with people who smoked? The matches WERE out on the kitchen table, and the coffee table, and in the cupboard, and in the car... We didn't mess with them because my folks at least, made it clear that there would be serious consiquences if we did.
Similarly when we would have the nieces and nephews over we let them use the computer and the internet. But we keep an eye on them. Likewise when they use the TV in the other room, we check on them every little while. With the internet and the TV we have made it clear what was acceptable and what was not. There were a few times I found them viewing something I didn't want them to. A site for Grant Theft Auto Mods is one that comes to mind. The result was they had to come downstairs and do something else. Howls of protest? Sure, but it's our house and you follow our rules. They all learned really quickly what they could and could not do.
Of course we didn't have to deal with them 24-7 like actual parents. I found that about three days was all I could take at one time.
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