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Wireless sharing between XP Home Edition & Windows 2000 Prof EditiMy home [desktop Dell CPU] has the XP Home Edition OS. My work laptop currently uses the Windows 2000 Professional OS. I'm having trouble sucessfully sharing my home printer(hard-wired to home CPU) with my laptop. Several months ago, I disabled the firewall protection on my home CPU and still received an error message (along the lines of "the shared computer cannont be found) - although I did forget to disable firewall settings when I attempted the [failed] sharing function just last week. 1st question I have is - does XP Home Edition OS support wireless networking/sharing [either in general or when crossed with a different OS like Windows 2000 Professional] - or do I need to have the XP Professional OS to successfully share [a printer]? If yes - is this strictly a firewall disablement issue or am I missing something else? Thanks in advance! -- MLA malarch wrote:
Show quoteHide quote > I'll keep this question simple... File-sharing between Windows machines has nothing to do with whether one> > My home [desktop Dell CPU] has the XP Home Edition OS. My work laptop > currently uses the Windows 2000 Professional OS. I'm having trouble > sucessfully sharing my home printer(hard-wired to home CPU) with my > laptop. Several months ago, I disabled the firewall protection on my > home CPU and still received an error message (along the lines of "the > shared computer cannont be found) - although I did forget to disable > firewall settings when I attempted the [failed] sharing function just > last week. > > 1st question I have is - does XP Home Edition OS support wireless > networking/sharing [either in general or when crossed with a different > OS like Windows 2000 Professional] - or do I need to have the XP > Professional OS to successfully share [a printer]? > > If yes - is this strictly a firewall disablement issue or am I missing > something else? or more of those machines is connecting to the lan via a wireless router or ethernet. Since XP Home only authenticates as Guest, create identical user accounts and passwords on both machines. If the XP Home machine currently doesn't use a password, assign one from the User Accounts applet in Control Panel. You can always set the machine to log in automatically for your convenience. Configure Windows to Automatically Login (MVP Ramesh) - http://windowsxp.mvps.org/Autologon.htm Do not disable firewalls! Instead, configure them to allow the lan traffic as trusted. If you are using the XPSP Windows Firewall, make sure 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. You only want one firewall running. 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 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
Let Windows manage neteork
No network connection wireless share files and printers 1394 connection Signal Strength Internet Gateway Speed Asymmetrical Wireless Transfer Speeds. Configuration Issue??? Extend wireless to a wired device... Other people using my wireless connection... what to do? help - home network & printer sharing wireless network keeps loosing connection |
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