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Media center HeadachesI've been read through several topics on networking Media Center and
Windows Home Editions and the headaches people are having. My headache has turned into a tumor. I'm trying to set up file sharing with between: Computer A (Home Edition) and Computer B (Media Center). I have tried everything, created new work groups, enabled file sharing, and I even begged with the laptop. Please help me or point me in the right direction. Has Microsft even addressed this issuse? Thank you Bobby wrote:
> I've been read through several topics on networking Media Center and There is no "issue" for Microsoft to address. You're doing something> Windows Home Editions and the headaches people are having. My > headache > has turned into a tumor. I'm trying to set up file sharing with > between: Computer A (Home Edition) and Computer B (Media Center). I > have tried everything, created new work groups, enabled file sharing, > and I even begged with the laptop. Please help me or point me in the > right direction. Has Microsft even addressed this issuse? Thank you wrong. Since you haven't told us any hard details of what you've done, here is my general "network problems" boilerplate. The section on "if one or more of the computers is XP Pro" is applicable to you because MCE is a super-set of Pro. BTW, Workgroups are just a cosmetic and organizational naming device and have nothing to do with local area network access. Run the Network Setup Wizard on both computers, making sure to enable File & Printer Sharing, and reboot. The only "gotcha" is that this will turn on the XPSP2 Windows Firewall. If you aren't running a third-party firewall or have an antivirus with "Internet Worm Protection" (like Norton 2005/06) which acts as a firewall, then you're fine. If you have third-party firewall software, configure it to allow the Local Area Network traffic as trusted. I usually do this with my firewalls with an IP range. Ex. would be 192.168.1.0-192.168.1.254. Obviously you would substitute your correct subnet. If one or more of the computers is XP Pro: a. If you need Pro's ability to set fine-grained permissions, turn off Simple File Sharing (Folder Options>View tab) and create identical user accounts/passwords on all computers. b. If you don't care about using Pro's advanced features, leave the Simple File Sharing enabled. XP Home only uses Simple Sharing. Simple File Sharing means that Guest (network) is enabled. This means that anyone without a user account on the target system can use its resources. This is a security hole but only you can decide if it matters in your situation. Then create shares as desired. XP Home does not permit sharing of users' home directories (My Documents) or Program Files, but you can share folders inside those directories. A better choice is to simply use the Shared Documents folder. If that doesn't work for you, here is an excellent network troubleshooter by MVP Hans-Georg Michna. Take the time to go through it and it will usually pinpoint the problem area(s) - http://winhlp.com/wxnet.htm Malke
Work Group problems
laptop doesn't detect LAN card (ethernet card) Switching between Wifi and Ethernet ? Use "Scheduled Tasks" to turn on/off Local Area Connection? Cant connect to network. Remote Desktop failure Being seen on a network dynamic ip address unable to network LAN, but all PC's have internet Force Remote Shutdown |
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