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2 Wire Gateway networking TroubleI have a 2-Wire 2700HG that I have hooked up in my house. I had a laptop
running wirelessly on it and recently added a desktop. The laptop is running XP Home and the desktop is running XP Media Center. I have tried to set up a network between the two and share files. I have run the network setup wizard, but I have not been able to see the network after setting it up. The desktop is conected via ethernet cable. If anyone has any advice on how to set up this network so I can share files and printers that would be very nice. I beleive I should be able to be on the same network even though one computer is wireless and the other is ethernet. I must be missing something. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks Dave daveydb wrote:
Show quoteHide quote > I have a 2-Wire 2700HG that I have hooked up in my house. I had a laptop The fact that one computer connects to the Local Area Network (LAN) wired> running wirelessly on it and recently added a desktop. The laptop is > running > XP Home and the desktop is running XP Media Center. I have tried to set > up a > network between the two and share files. I have run the network setup > wizard, but I have not been able to see the network after setting it up. > The desktop is conected via ethernet cable. > > If anyone has any advice on how to set up this network so I can share > files > and printers that would be very nice. I beleive I should be able to be on > the same network even though one computer is wireless and the other is > ethernet. I must be missing something. Any help would be appreciated. and the other wireless is irrelevant. I'm assuming that both computers can get to the Internet. If not, please provide that information. Problems sharing files between computers on a network are generally caused by 1) a misconfigured firewall or overlooked firewall (including a stateful firewall in a VPN); or 2) inadvertently running two firewalls such as the built-in Windows Firewall and a third-party firewall; and/or 3) not having identical user accounts and passwords on all Workgroup machines; 4) trying to create shares where the operating system does not permit it. A. Configure firewalls on all machines to allow the Local Area Network (LAN) traffic as trusted. With Windows Firewall, this means allowing File/Printer Sharing on the Exceptions tab. Normally running the Network Setup Wizard on XP will take care of this for those machines.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/security program with its own firewall component, then you're fine. With third-party firewalls, I usually configure the LAN allowance with an IP range. Ex. would be 192.168.1.0-192.168.1.254. Obviously you would substitute your correct subnet. Refer to any third party security program's Help or user forums for how to properly configure its firewall. Do not run more than one firewall. DO NOT TURN OFF FIREWALLS; CONFIGURE THEM CORRECTLY. B. For ease of organization, put all computers in the same Workgroup. This is done from the System applet in Control Panel, Computer Name tab. C. Create matching user accounts and passwords on all machines. You do not need to be logged into the same account on all machines and the passwords assigned to each user account can be different; the accounts/passwords just need to exist and match on all machines. DO NOT NEGLECT TO CREATE PASSWORDS, EVEN IF ONLY SIMPLE ONES. If you wish a machine to boot directly to the Desktop (into one particular user's account) for convenience, you can do this. The instructions at this link work for both XP and Vista: Configure Windows to Automatically Login (MVP Ramesh) - http://windowsxp.mvps.org/Autologon.htm D. If one or more of the computers is XP Pro or Media Center, turn off Simple File Sharing (Folder Options>View tab). E. Create shares as desired. XP Home does not permit sharing of users' home directories or Program Files, but you can share folders inside those directories. A better choice is to simply use the Shared Documents folder. F. After you have file sharing working (and have tested this by exchanging a file between all machines), if you want to share a printer connected locally to one of your computers, share it out from that machine. Then go to the printer mftr.'s website and download the latest drivers for the correct operating system(s). Install them on the target machine(s). The printer should be seen during the installation routine. If it is not, install the drivers and then use the Add Printer Wizard. In some instances, certain printers need to be installed as Local printers but that is outside of this response. Malke
How many XP PCs can be on a network?
Networking two pc's No DNS servers listed in IPCONFIG /all strange internet problem Password Issue when sharing files between VISTA & XP machines No process listening on port 445 connecting to remote office site network printer Core Utilization Monitoring Network Share and Nethood Issue |
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