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OK, following the suggestions in various threads on this news group, I
did the following. 1. On my new windows vista machine (HP Pavilion dv2200) I did a full system restore, resetting back to all settings that existed right out of the box. 2. Fully diagnosed and debugged all network issues on the other PCs on my home network. This includes one Windows 95 PC, one Windows 98 PC, and two Windows XP PCs. They are all sharing the same workgroup, can all share printers and files in a fully expected way, and are all visible on each other's "Network Neighborhood" or "View Workgroup Computers" screen. I also have a print server on that same workgroup, also fully viewable and usable by all. Also installed LLTD on both Windows XP computers. 3. Booted up (as if for the first time) the Vista computer. 4. Connected the Vista computer to my wireless LAN, so that it had internet access. 5. Of course, then there were windows updates and HP updates and all that, so I booted it up a total of four more times to bring it to a stable place. I have added no software or configuration. 6. Disconnected my wireless router from the internet so that I didn't have to worry about any outside intrusions. 7. Disabled or closed the firewall on every single computer in the home. All naked to the world on every port. 8. Changed the workgroup name on the Vista computer to match the workgroup name on every other computer on my LAN. Had to reboot one more time. 9. Made the network I was dealing with on the VISTA computer a "private" network. Turned file sharing and printer sharing on on the "Network and Sharing" page of the VISTA computer. Turned "Password Protection" off. 10. Looked at the full "Network Map" on the Vista computer. As expected, the router and the two windows XP computers showed up. The print server and the windows 98 and windows 95 machine do not show up. No surprise there, they do not have LLTD. 11. Verified that the Vista machine could ping every other machine by IP address (including the print server and the router) on the network. 12. Verified that every other computer and the router could ping the VISTA machine. Re-verified that the non-vista computers could ping each other. 13. The Vista machine shows up in the network neighborhood or "View Workgroup" screen of all the other computers, except the Windows 95 computer. However, when I try to open the Vista computer, or look at the properties, I get an error message from ANY of the other computers saying "//Vista-PC is not accessible. You might not have permission to access it, contact the system administrator" Under that, the dialog says "The Network Path was not found". 14. When I try to view the network on the VISTA machine, ONLY the network hub/router and the vista machine itself show up. The other machines do not show up at all. 15. I verified once again that ALL firewalls are off. I am at the end of the rope here.... this computer is a big paperweight if it can't talk to my other computers. Would love any thoughts. -stephan |
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Stephan,
Do you have any 3rd party firewalls like Windows Live One Care, Norton Internet Security? Thanks, Sen. "Stephan G." wrote: OK, following the suggestions in various threads on this news group, I did the following. 1. On my new windows vista machine (HP Pavilion dv2200) I did a full system restore, resetting back to all settings that existed right out of the box. 2. Fully diagnosed and debugged all network issues on the other PCs on my home network. This includes one Windows 95 PC, one Windows 98 PC, and two Windows XP PCs. They are all sharing the same workgroup, can all share printers and files in a fully expected way, and are all visible on each other's "Network Neighborhood" or "View Workgroup Computers" screen. I also have a print server on that same workgroup, also fully viewable and usable by all. Also installed LLTD on both Windows XP computers. 3. Booted up (as if for the first time) the Vista computer. 4. Connected the Vista computer to my wireless LAN, so that it had internet access. 5. Of course, then there were windows updates and HP updates and all that, so I booted it up a total of four more times to bring it to a stable place. I have added no software or configuration. 6. Disconnected my wireless router from the internet so that I didn't have to worry about any outside intrusions. 7. Disabled or closed the firewall on every single computer in the home. All naked to the world on every port. 8. Changed the workgroup name on the Vista computer to match the workgroup name on every other computer on my LAN. Had to reboot one more time. 9. Made the network I was dealing with on the VISTA computer a "private" network. Turned file sharing and printer sharing on on the "Network and Sharing" page of the VISTA computer. Turned "Password Protection" off. 10. Looked at the full "Network Map" on the Vista computer. As expected, the router and the two windows XP computers showed up. The print server and the windows 98 and windows 95 machine do not show up. No surprise there, they do not have LLTD. 11. Verified that the Vista machine could ping every other machine by IP address (including the print server and the router) on the network. 12. Verified that every other computer and the router could ping the VISTA machine. Re-verified that the non-vista computers could ping each other. 13. The Vista machine shows up in the network neighborhood or "View Workgroup" screen of all the other computers, except the Windows 95 computer. However, when I try to open the Vista computer, or look at the properties, I get an error message from ANY of the other computers saying "//Vista-PC is not accessible. You might not have permission to access it, contact the system administrator" Under that, the dialog says "The Network Path was not found". 14. When I try to view the network on the VISTA machine, ONLY the network hub/router and the vista machine itself show up. The other machines do not show up at all. 15. I verified once again that ALL firewalls are off. I am at the end of the rope here.... this computer is a big paperweight if it can't talk to my other computers. Would love any thoughts. -stephan |
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Hi Stephan,
Be patience with us. If you do: net use \\xpipaddress /u:username (note: 1. do this from Vista. 2. the xpipaddress is XP Ip address. 3. the username is the username logon the or you created in the XP). Do you receive any system error? Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Stephan G." wrote in message ... OK, following the suggestions in various threads on this news group, I did the following. 1. On my new windows vista machine (HP Pavilion dv2200) I did a full system restore, resetting back to all settings that existed right out of the box. 2. Fully diagnosed and debugged all network issues on the other PCs on my home network. This includes one Windows 95 PC, one Windows 98 PC, and two Windows XP PCs. They are all sharing the same workgroup, can all share printers and files in a fully expected way, and are all visible on each other's "Network Neighborhood" or "View Workgroup Computers" screen. I also have a print server on that same workgroup, also fully viewable and usable by all. Also installed LLTD on both Windows XP computers. 3. Booted up (as if for the first time) the Vista computer. 4. Connected the Vista computer to my wireless LAN, so that it had internet access. 5. Of course, then there were windows updates and HP updates and all that, so I booted it up a total of four more times to bring it to a stable place. I have added no software or configuration. 6. Disconnected my wireless router from the internet so that I didn't have to worry about any outside intrusions. 7. Disabled or closed the firewall on every single computer in the home. All naked to the world on every port. 8. Changed the workgroup name on the Vista computer to match the workgroup name on every other computer on my LAN. Had to reboot one more time. 9. Made the network I was dealing with on the VISTA computer a "private" network. Turned file sharing and printer sharing on on the "Network and Sharing" page of the VISTA computer. Turned "Password Protection" off. 10. Looked at the full "Network Map" on the Vista computer. As expected, the router and the two windows XP computers showed up. The print server and the windows 98 and windows 95 machine do not show up. No surprise there, they do not have LLTD. 11. Verified that the Vista machine could ping every other machine by IP address (including the print server and the router) on the network. 12. Verified that every other computer and the router could ping the VISTA machine. Re-verified that the non-vista computers could ping each other. 13. The Vista machine shows up in the network neighborhood or "View Workgroup" screen of all the other computers, except the Windows 95 computer. However, when I try to open the Vista computer, or look at the properties, I get an error message from ANY of the other computers saying "//Vista-PC is not accessible. You might not have permission to access it, contact the system administrator" Under that, the dialog says "The Network Path was not found". 14. When I try to view the network on the VISTA machine, ONLY the network hub/router and the vista machine itself show up. The other machines do not show up at all. 15. I verified once again that ALL firewalls are off. I am at the end of the rope here.... this computer is a big paperweight if it can't talk to my other computers. Would love any thoughts. -stephan |
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My Vista did come pre-installed with Norton, but as I said in step 7, I
disabled EVERY firewall, including the one on the VISTA machine. Thanks... I hope there is a next idea.... -s Sen [MSFT] wrote: Stephan, Do you have any 3rd party firewalls like Windows Live One Care, Norton Internet Security? Thanks, Sen. "Stephan G." wrote: OK, following the suggestions in various threads on this news group, I did the following. 1. On my new windows vista machine (HP Pavilion dv2200) I did a full system restore, resetting back to all settings that existed right out of the box. 2. Fully diagnosed and debugged all network issues on the other PCs on my home network. This includes one Windows 95 PC, one Windows 98 PC, and two Windows XP PCs. They are all sharing the same workgroup, can all share printers and files in a fully expected way, and are all visible on each other's "Network Neighborhood" or "View Workgroup Computers" screen. I also have a print server on that same workgroup, also fully viewable and usable by all. Also installed LLTD on both Windows XP computers. 3. Booted up (as if for the first time) the Vista computer. 4. Connected the Vista computer to my wireless LAN, so that it had internet access. 5. Of course, then there were windows updates and HP updates and all that, so I booted it up a total of four more times to bring it to a stable place. I have added no software or configuration. 6. Disconnected my wireless router from the internet so that I didn't have to worry about any outside intrusions. 7. Disabled or closed the firewall on every single computer in the home. All naked to the world on every port. 8. Changed the workgroup name on the Vista computer to match the workgroup name on every other computer on my LAN. Had to reboot one more time. 9. Made the network I was dealing with on the VISTA computer a "private" network. Turned file sharing and printer sharing on on the "Network and Sharing" page of the VISTA computer. Turned "Password Protection" off. 10. Looked at the full "Network Map" on the Vista computer. As expected, the router and the two windows XP computers showed up. The print server and the windows 98 and windows 95 machine do not show up. No surprise there, they do not have LLTD. 11. Verified that the Vista machine could ping every other machine by IP address (including the print server and the router) on the network. 12. Verified that every other computer and the router could ping the VISTA machine. Re-verified that the non-vista computers could ping each other. 13. The Vista machine shows up in the network neighborhood or "View Workgroup" screen of all the other computers, except the Windows 95 computer. However, when I try to open the Vista computer, or look at the properties, I get an error message from ANY of the other computers saying "//Vista-PC is not accessible. You might not have permission to access it, contact the system administrator" Under that, the dialog says "The Network Path was not found". 14. When I try to view the network on the VISTA machine, ONLY the network hub/router and the vista machine itself show up. The other machines do not show up at all. 15. I verified once again that ALL firewalls are off. I am at the end of the rope here.... this computer is a big paperweight if it can't talk to my other computers. Would love any thoughts. -stephan |
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I couldn't be more patient than I am having been on hold for hours at a
time to HP tech support! But your instinct is great. I did the "net use" command you suggested, and it worked fine. And a subsequent "net use" by itself shows that the connection was made, and was persistent. I deleted the connection (parenthetically, I don't really know what "net use" without a disk or device does...) and then was able to "net use" a drive z: from my vista computer and it mounted correctly. I was able to do the same from the XP machine to the vista machine. Let me tell you my friend, this is the first real progress I have seen all day. If it weren't for the fact that I am using DHCP to get IP addresses, this would be a fine solution. But given that DHCP is being used, and that the IP addresses can be switched around, I imagine that this can't work unless I reconfigure my entire network to use static addresses. Which is possible, but not ideal.... I would love the computer names to be the "thing" which connects. Just for kicks, I did try the same "net use" command using the computer name rather than the IP address, and it did not work. Any further thoughts? -stephan Robert L [MVP - Networking] wrote: Hi Stephan, Be patience with us. If you do: net use \\xpipaddress file://\\xpipaddress /u:username (note: 1. do this from Vista. 2. the xpipaddress is XP Ip address. 3. the username is the username logon the or you created in the XP). Do you receive any system error? Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Stephan G." wrote in message ... OK, following the suggestions in various threads on this news group, I did the following. 1. On my new windows vista machine (HP Pavilion dv2200) I did a full system restore, resetting back to all settings that existed right out of the box. 2. Fully diagnosed and debugged all network issues on the other PCs on my home network. This includes one Windows 95 PC, one Windows 98 PC, and two Windows XP PCs. They are all sharing the same workgroup, can all share printers and files in a fully expected way, and are all visible on each other's "Network Neighborhood" or "View Workgroup Computers" screen. I also have a print server on that same workgroup, also fully viewable and usable by all. Also installed LLTD on both Windows XP computers. 3. Booted up (as if for the first time) the Vista computer. 4. Connected the Vista computer to my wireless LAN, so that it had internet access. 5. Of course, then there were windows updates and HP updates and all that, so I booted it up a total of four more times to bring it to a stable place. I have added no software or configuration. 6. Disconnected my wireless router from the internet so that I didn't have to worry about any outside intrusions. 7. Disabled or closed the firewall on every single computer in the home. All naked to the world on every port. 8. Changed the workgroup name on the Vista computer to match the workgroup name on every other computer on my LAN. Had to reboot one more time. 9. Made the network I was dealing with on the VISTA computer a "private" network. Turned file sharing and printer sharing on on the "Network and Sharing" page of the VISTA computer. Turned "Password Protection" off. 10. Looked at the full "Network Map" on the Vista computer. As expected, the router and the two windows XP computers showed up. The print server and the windows 98 and windows 95 machine do not show up. No surprise there, they do not have LLTD. 11. Verified that the Vista machine could ping every other machine by IP address (including the print server and the router) on the network. 12. Verified that every other computer and the router could ping the VISTA machine. Re-verified that the non-vista computers could ping each other. 13. The Vista machine shows up in the network neighborhood or "View Workgroup" screen of all the other computers, except the Windows 95 computer. However, when I try to open the Vista computer, or look at the properties, I get an error message from ANY of the other computers saying "//Vista-PC is not accessible. You might not have permission to access it, contact the system administrator" Under that, the dialog says "The Network Path was not found". 14. When I try to view the network on the VISTA machine, ONLY the network hub/router and the vista machine itself show up. The other machines do not show up at all. 15. I verified once again that ALL firewalls are off. I am at the end of the rope here.... this computer is a big paperweight if it can't talk to my other computers. Would love any thoughts. -stephan |
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Good, at lease we know you can access XP using IP. Normally, "The Network Path was not found" may cause by name resolution or firewall. Since you have turn off all firewall, it could be the name resolution issue. Did you mentioned enabling NetBIOS over TCP/IP? I not, you may try that first. Please post back with the result.
Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Stephan G." wrote in message ... I couldn't be more patient than I am having been on hold for hours at a time to HP tech support! But your instinct is great. I did the "net use" command you suggested, and it worked fine. And a subsequent "net use" by itself shows that the connection was made, and was persistent. I deleted the connection (parenthetically, I don't really know what "net use" without a disk or device does...) and then was able to "net use" a drive z: from my vista computer and it mounted correctly. I was able to do the same from the XP machine to the vista machine. Let me tell you my friend, this is the first real progress I have seen all day. If it weren't for the fact that I am using DHCP to get IP addresses, this would be a fine solution. But given that DHCP is being used, and that the IP addresses can be switched around, I imagine that this can't work unless I reconfigure my entire network to use static addresses. Which is possible, but not ideal.... I would love the computer names to be the "thing" which connects. Just for kicks, I did try the same "net use" command using the computer name rather than the IP address, and it did not work. Any further thoughts? -stephan Robert L [MVP - Networking] wrote: Hi Stephan, Be patience with us. If you do: net use \\xpipaddress file://\\xpipaddress /u:username (note: 1. do this from Vista. 2. the xpipaddress is XP Ip address. 3. the username is the username logon the or you created in the XP). Do you receive any system error? Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Stephan G." wrote in message ... OK, following the suggestions in various threads on this news group, I did the following. 1. On my new windows vista machine (HP Pavilion dv2200) I did a full system restore, resetting back to all settings that existed right out of the box. 2. Fully diagnosed and debugged all network issues on the other PCs on my home network. This includes one Windows 95 PC, one Windows 98 PC, and two Windows XP PCs. They are all sharing the same workgroup, can all share printers and files in a fully expected way, and are all visible on each other's "Network Neighborhood" or "View Workgroup Computers" screen. I also have a print server on that same workgroup, also fully viewable and usable by all. Also installed LLTD on both Windows XP computers. 3. Booted up (as if for the first time) the Vista computer. 4. Connected the Vista computer to my wireless LAN, so that it had internet access. 5. Of course, then there were windows updates and HP updates and all that, so I booted it up a total of four more times to bring it to a stable place. I have added no software or configuration. 6. Disconnected my wireless router from the internet so that I didn't have to worry about any outside intrusions. 7. Disabled or closed the firewall on every single computer in the home. All naked to the world on every port. 8. Changed the workgroup name on the Vista computer to match the workgroup name on every other computer on my LAN. Had to reboot one more time. 9. Made the network I was dealing with on the VISTA computer a "private" network. Turned file sharing and printer sharing on on the "Network and Sharing" page of the VISTA computer. Turned "Password Protection" off. 10. Looked at the full "Network Map" on the Vista computer. As expected, the router and the two windows XP computers showed up. The print server and the windows 98 and windows 95 machine do not show up. No surprise there, they do not have LLTD. 11. Verified that the Vista machine could ping every other machine by IP address (including the print server and the router) on the network. 12. Verified that every other computer and the router could ping the VISTA machine. Re-verified that the non-vista computers could ping each other. 13. The Vista machine shows up in the network neighborhood or "View Workgroup" screen of all the other computers, except the Windows 95 computer. However, when I try to open the Vista computer, or look at the properties, I get an error message from ANY of the other computers saying "//Vista-PC is not accessible. You might not have permission to access it, contact the system administrator" Under that, the dialog says "The Network Path was not found". 14. When I try to view the network on the VISTA machine, ONLY the network hub/router and the vista machine itself show up. The other machines do not show up at all. 15. I verified once again that ALL firewalls are off. I am at the end of the rope here.... this computer is a big paperweight if it can't talk to my other computers. Would love any thoughts. -stephan |
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Hi my fullest sympathy mine was sorted via a 6 hour session with m/soft plus a conference call they set up with Lynksis tec dept. under control panel network sharing centre connection------on right view status then properties remove tick from IPV6 you dont need 2 IPV4 will do remainder of boxes i have 7 in total other 6 are all ticked also have you spoken to router tec department i have a Lynksis router they made a small change in 192.168.1.1 but sorry cant remember what it was Also i noted you mentioned disabling firewalls according to the gospel of microsft this actaully does nothing the firewall still runs in background someone also mentioned liveonecare this is not third party its m/soft and i now have it running here after same hassle as you all other third party firewalls etc in vista machine had to be totally removed from computer if you get liveonecare from m/soft site it has a 90 day free trial you will need to make one alteration from the default settings in it 1] live onecare centre 2]on left select change settings 3] select firewall 4] firewall connection tool 5] place a tick in box for file and printer sharing remainder do not have a tick in them hopefully this will help a little for the record lynksis got me to place a floppy in A drive known to have files on it they then concentrated on getting XP machines to see that drive in vista machine after that microsft sorted the rest in under 5 mins as we had reached a point where they could fathom remainder out cheers for now Keith D. |
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Keith,
Thank you for the detail information. Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Keith D" wrote in message ... Hi my fullest sympathy mine was sorted via a 6 hour session with m/soft plus a conference call they set up with Lynksis tec dept. under control panel network sharing centre connection------on right view status then properties remove tick from IPV6 you dont need 2 IPV4 will do remainder of boxes i have 7 in total other 6 are all ticked also have you spoken to router tec department i have a Lynksis router they made a small change in 192.168.1.1 but sorry cant remember what it was Also i noted you mentioned disabling firewalls according to the gospel of microsft this actaully does nothing the firewall still runs in background someone also mentioned liveonecare this is not third party its m/soft and i now have it running here after same hassle as you all other third party firewalls etc in vista machine had to be totally removed from computer if you get liveonecare from m/soft site it has a 90 day free trial you will need to make one alteration from the default settings in it 1] live onecare centre 2]on left select change settings 3] select firewall 4] firewall connection tool 5] place a tick in box for file and printer sharing remainder do not have a tick in them hopefully this will help a little for the record lynksis got me to place a floppy in A drive known to have files on it they then concentrated on getting XP machines to see that drive in vista machine after that microsft sorted the rest in under 5 mins as we had reached a point where they could fathom remainder out cheers for now Keith D. |
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As far as I can tell, NetBIOS is enabled over TCP/IP on all machines. I
didn't do anything to enable it, but when I look at the settings on the properties screen for TCP/IP, the "Enable Netbios" check box is marked. On some machines on my network, it is checked, but also greyed out, so that I would be unable to uncheck it. In some cases it is checked and not greyed out (like the Vista machine). Robert L [MVP - Networking] wrote: Good, at lease we know you can access XP using IP. Normally, "The Network Path was not found" may cause by name resolution or firewall. Since you have turn off all firewall, it could be the name resolution issue. Did you mentioned enabling NetBIOS over TCP/IP? I not, you may try that first. Please post back with the result. Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Stephan G." wrote in message ... I couldn't be more patient than I am having been on hold for hours at a time to HP tech support! But your instinct is great. I did the "net use" command you suggested, and it worked fine. And a subsequent "net use" by itself shows that the connection was made, and was persistent. I deleted the connection (parenthetically, I don't really know what "net use" without a disk or device does...) and then was able to "net use" a drive z: from my vista computer and it mounted correctly. I was able to do the same from the XP machine to the vista machine. Let me tell you my friend, this is the first real progress I have seen all day. If it weren't for the fact that I am using DHCP to get IP addresses, this would be a fine solution. But given that DHCP is being used, and that the IP addresses can be switched around, I imagine that this can't work unless I reconfigure my entire network to use static addresses. Which is possible, but not ideal.... I would love the computer names to be the "thing" which connects. Just for kicks, I did try the same "net use" command using the computer name rather than the IP address, and it did not work. Any further thoughts? -stephan Robert L [MVP - Networking] wrote: Hi Stephan, Be patience with us. If you do: net use \\xpipaddress file://\\xpipaddress file://\\xpipaddress /u:username (note: 1. do this from Vista. 2. the xpipaddress is XP Ip address. 3. the username is the username logon the or you created in the XP). Do you receive any system error? Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Stephan G." wrote in message ... OK, following the suggestions in various threads on this news group, I did the following. 1. On my new windows vista machine (HP Pavilion dv2200) I did a full system restore, resetting back to all settings that existed right out of the box. 2. Fully diagnosed and debugged all network issues on the other PCs on my home network. This includes one Windows 95 PC, one Windows 98 PC, and two Windows XP PCs. They are all sharing the same workgroup, can all share printers and files in a fully expected way, and are all visible on each other's "Network Neighborhood" or "View Workgroup Computers" screen. I also have a print server on that same workgroup, also fully viewable and usable by all. Also installed LLTD on both Windows XP computers. 3. Booted up (as if for the first time) the Vista computer. 4. Connected the Vista computer to my wireless LAN, so that it had internet access. 5. Of course, then there were windows updates and HP updates and all that, so I booted it up a total of four more times to bring it to a stable place. I have added no software or configuration. 6. Disconnected my wireless router from the internet so that I didn't have to worry about any outside intrusions. 7. Disabled or closed the firewall on every single computer in the home. All naked to the world on every port. 8. Changed the workgroup name on the Vista computer to match the workgroup name on every other computer on my LAN. Had to reboot one more time. 9. Made the network I was dealing with on the VISTA computer a "private" network. Turned file sharing and printer sharing on on the "Network and Sharing" page of the VISTA computer. Turned "Password Protection" off. 10. Looked at the full "Network Map" on the Vista computer. As expected, the router and the two windows XP computers showed up. The print server and the windows 98 and windows 95 machine do not show up. No surprise there, they do not have LLTD. 11. Verified that the Vista machine could ping every other machine by IP address (including the print server and the router) on the network. 12. Verified that every other computer and the router could ping the VISTA machine. Re-verified that the non-vista computers could ping each other. 13. The Vista machine shows up in the network neighborhood or "View Workgroup" screen of all the other computers, except the Windows 95 computer. However, when I try to open the Vista computer, or look at the properties, I get an error message from ANY of the other computers saying "//Vista-PC is not accessible. You might not have permission to access it, contact the system administrator" Under that, the dialog says "The Network Path was not found". 14. When I try to view the network on the VISTA machine, ONLY the network hub/router and the vista machine itself show up. The other machines do not show up at all. 15. I verified once again that ALL firewalls are off. I am at the end of the rope here.... this computer is a big paperweight if it can't talk to my other computers. Would love any thoughts. -stephan |
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One more thing - I feel like I observe over the network that when there
is the attempt to connect by name (rather than IP address) it seems that the request for the name is going out to the DNS server on the internet, which of course would not be able to resolve the name, since these are just local names. I see a DNS request packet leaving both the XP machine and the VISTA machine destined for the DNS server. Somehow we need to look for this stuff locally -- does this make sense? -s Robert L [MVP - Networking] wrote: Good, at lease we know you can access XP using IP. Normally, "The Network Path was not found" may cause by name resolution or firewall. Since you have turn off all firewall, it could be the name resolution issue. Did you mentioned enabling NetBIOS over TCP/IP? I not, you may try that first. Please post back with the result. Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Stephan G." wrote in message ... I couldn't be more patient than I am having been on hold for hours at a time to HP tech support! But your instinct is great. I did the "net use" command you suggested, and it worked fine. And a subsequent "net use" by itself shows that the connection was made, and was persistent. I deleted the connection (parenthetically, I don't really know what "net use" without a disk or device does...) and then was able to "net use" a drive z: from my vista computer and it mounted correctly. I was able to do the same from the XP machine to the vista machine. Let me tell you my friend, this is the first real progress I have seen all day. If it weren't for the fact that I am using DHCP to get IP addresses, this would be a fine solution. But given that DHCP is being used, and that the IP addresses can be switched around, I imagine that this can't work unless I reconfigure my entire network to use static addresses. Which is possible, but not ideal.... I would love the computer names to be the "thing" which connects. Just for kicks, I did try the same "net use" command using the computer name rather than the IP address, and it did not work. Any further thoughts? -stephan Robert L [MVP - Networking] wrote: Hi Stephan, Be patience with us. If you do: net use \\xpipaddress file://\\xpipaddress file://\\xpipaddress /u:username (note: 1. do this from Vista. 2. the xpipaddress is XP Ip address. 3. the username is the username logon the or you created in the XP). Do you receive any system error? Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Stephan G." wrote in message ... OK, following the suggestions in various threads on this news group, I did the following. 1. On my new windows vista machine (HP Pavilion dv2200) I did a full system restore, resetting back to all settings that existed right out of the box. 2. Fully diagnosed and debugged all network issues on the other PCs on my home network. This includes one Windows 95 PC, one Windows 98 PC, and two Windows XP PCs. They are all sharing the same workgroup, can all share printers and files in a fully expected way, and are all visible on each other's "Network Neighborhood" or "View Workgroup Computers" screen. I also have a print server on that same workgroup, also fully viewable and usable by all. Also installed LLTD on both Windows XP computers. 3. Booted up (as if for the first time) the Vista computer. 4. Connected the Vista computer to my wireless LAN, so that it had internet access. 5. Of course, then there were windows updates and HP updates and all that, so I booted it up a total of four more times to bring it to a stable place. I have added no software or configuration. 6. Disconnected my wireless router from the internet so that I didn't have to worry about any outside intrusions. 7. Disabled or closed the firewall on every single computer in the home. All naked to the world on every port. 8. Changed the workgroup name on the Vista computer to match the workgroup name on every other computer on my LAN. Had to reboot one more time. 9. Made the network I was dealing with on the VISTA computer a "private" network. Turned file sharing and printer sharing on on the "Network and Sharing" page of the VISTA computer. Turned "Password Protection" off. 10. Looked at the full "Network Map" on the Vista computer. As expected, the router and the two windows XP computers showed up. The print server and the windows 98 and windows 95 machine do not show up. No surprise there, they do not have LLTD. 11. Verified that the Vista machine could ping every other machine by IP address (including the print server and the router) on the network. 12. Verified that every other computer and the router could ping the VISTA machine. Re-verified that the non-vista computers could ping each other. 13. The Vista machine shows up in the network neighborhood or "View Workgroup" screen of all the other computers, except the Windows 95 computer. However, when I try to open the Vista computer, or look at the properties, I get an error message from ANY of the other computers saying "//Vista-PC is not accessible. You might not have permission to access it, contact the system administrator" Under that, the dialog says "The Network Path was not found". 14. When I try to view the network on the VISTA machine, ONLY the network hub/router and the vista machine itself show up. The other machines do not show up at all. 15. I verified once again that ALL firewalls are off. I am at the end of the rope here.... this computer is a big paperweight if it can't talk to my other computers. Would love any thoughts. -stephan |
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