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I love my XP machine. I've got my Powertoys going on. I've got all sorts of
customizations that I've added over the last three years, but as I spend a lot of time running Visual Studio to develop ASP.Net applications, I decided to upgrade to a faster machine, and heck, why not "upgrade" to Vista while I'm at it. What a miserable mistake. Aside from the general aggrivation of everything being in a new place on the machine, I've spent hours just trying to get my Vista machine to find the other two computers on my network. One is the old XP machine, which I'm still using more often, just because it's more efficient with the Powertoys customizations. The other computer is a Mac G4, which I use for my graphic design applications (Adobe CS2). Now, the XP machine and the G4 got along swimmingly until the Vista machine showed up on the scene. I have managed to get the two Windows machines to play nice together, but I absolutely cannot connect Vista to Mac. I get as far as a "Connect to..." authentication pop-up (by typing \\internalIP\MacName into a browser window) but for some incredibly annoying reason, Vista keeps sticking its machine name in front of my Mac username when I try to authenticate. XP doesn't do this, so I'm able to log in to the Mac from XP just by using the Mac credentials. But retarded Vista insists on sticking a domain name in front of the username when attempting to authenticate. It's 2:00am, and I'm too tired to keep screwing around with this. I managed to get no work done as a result of dicking around with my Norton 2007 settings until I could finally connect the two Windows machines (I had to turn off the Norton firewall, which means I get to stare at an annoying, angry Norton icon in the system tray, since it thinks I'm no longer secure). I'm hoping that someone out there has managed to get their Vista machine connected to a Mac running OSX 1.3 and can let me in on the secret. I'm absolutely dumbfounded by Vista. I was expecting something like XP, only slicker and more like a Mac. Instead I get a big headache every time I try do something that really shouldn't be a hassle (don't even ask about installing Visual Studio 2005 on Vista...). |
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see if
http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/b...Mac +OSX.aspx helps. It took me a while to get my macbook pro and vista to play nice together On Tue, 6 Mar 2007 02:18:41 -0800, IWantXPBack wrote: I love my XP machine. I've got my Powertoys going on. I've got all sorts of customizations that I've added over the last three years, but as I spend a lot of time running Visual Studio to develop ASP.Net applications, I decided to upgrade to a faster machine, and heck, why not "upgrade" to Vista while I'm at it. What a miserable mistake. Aside from the general aggrivation of everything being in a new place on the machine, I've spent hours just trying to get my Vista machine to find the other two computers on my network. One is the old XP machine, which I'm still using more often, just because it's more efficient with the Powertoys customizations. The other computer is a Mac G4, which I use for my graphic design applications (Adobe CS2). Now, the XP machine and the G4 got along swimmingly until the Vista machine showed up on the scene. I have managed to get the two Windows machines to play nice together, but I absolutely cannot connect Vista to Mac. I get as far as a "Connect to..." authentication pop-up (by typing \\internalIP\MacName into a browser window) but for some incredibly annoying reason, Vista keeps sticking its machine name in front of my Mac username when I try to authenticate. XP doesn't do this, so I'm able to log in to the Mac from XP just by using the Mac credentials. But retarded Vista insists on sticking a domain name in front of the username when attempting to authenticate. It's 2:00am, and I'm too tired to keep screwing around with this. I managed to get no work done as a result of dicking around with my Norton 2007 settings until I could finally connect the two Windows machines (I had to turn off the Norton firewall, which means I get to stare at an annoying, angry Norton icon in the system tray, since it thinks I'm no longer secure). I'm hoping that someone out there has managed to get their Vista machine connected to a Mac running OSX 1.3 and can let me in on the secret. I'm absolutely dumbfounded by Vista. I was expecting something like XP, only slicker and more like a Mac. Instead I get a big headache every time I try do something that really shouldn't be a hassle (don't even ask about installing Visual Studio 2005 on Vista...). -- Barb Bowman MS Windows-MVP Expert Zone & Vista Community Columnist http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ |
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Thanks for the information.
I have Vista Business. I had no idea there were so many versions. Does Vista Business behave like one of the versions you mentioned? I'm loathe to start poking around in the registry, but if that's how Microsoft expects to win over people who are already Mac owners...I guess I'll have to do it. "Barb Bowman" wrote: see if http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/b...Mac +OSX.aspx helps. It took me a while to get my macbook pro and vista to play nice together On Tue, 6 Mar 2007 02:18:41 -0800, IWantXPBack wrote: I love my XP machine. I've got my Powertoys going on. I've got all sorts of customizations that I've added over the last three years, but as I spend a lot of time running Visual Studio to develop ASP.Net applications, I decided to upgrade to a faster machine, and heck, why not "upgrade" to Vista while I'm at it. What a miserable mistake. Aside from the general aggrivation of everything being in a new place on the machine, I've spent hours just trying to get my Vista machine to find the other two computers on my network. One is the old XP machine, which I'm still using more often, just because it's more efficient with the Powertoys customizations. The other computer is a Mac G4, which I use for my graphic design applications (Adobe CS2). Now, the XP machine and the G4 got along swimmingly until the Vista machine showed up on the scene. I have managed to get the two Windows machines to play nice together, but I absolutely cannot connect Vista to Mac. I get as far as a "Connect to..." authentication pop-up (by typing \\internalIP\MacName into a browser window) but for some incredibly annoying reason, Vista keeps sticking its machine name in front of my Mac username when I try to authenticate. XP doesn't do this, so I'm able to log in to the Mac from XP just by using the Mac credentials. But retarded Vista insists on sticking a domain name in front of the username when attempting to authenticate. It's 2:00am, and I'm too tired to keep screwing around with this. I managed to get no work done as a result of dicking around with my Norton 2007 settings until I could finally connect the two Windows machines (I had to turn off the Norton firewall, which means I get to stare at an annoying, angry Norton icon in the system tray, since it thinks I'm no longer secure). I'm hoping that someone out there has managed to get their Vista machine connected to a Mac running OSX 1.3 and can let me in on the secret. I'm absolutely dumbfounded by Vista. I was expecting something like XP, only slicker and more like a Mac. Instead I get a big headache every time I try do something that really shouldn't be a hassle (don't even ask about installing Visual Studio 2005 on Vista...). -- Barb Bowman MS Windows-MVP Expert Zone & Vista Community Columnist http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ |
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if you are on a domain, I don't know what this may do but I'd advise
against making changes if this is the case and asking your network admin. On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 20:35:03 -0700, IWantXPBack wrote: Thanks for the information. I have Vista Business. I had no idea there were so many versions. Does Vista Business behave like one of the versions you mentioned? I'm loathe to start poking around in the registry, but if that's how Microsoft expects to win over people who are already Mac owners...I guess I'll have to do it. "Barb Bowman" wrote: see if http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/b...Mac +OSX.aspx helps. It took me a while to get my macbook pro and vista to play nice together On Tue, 6 Mar 2007 02:18:41 -0800, IWantXPBack wrote: I love my XP machine. I've got my Powertoys going on. I've got all sorts of customizations that I've added over the last three years, but as I spend a lot of time running Visual Studio to develop ASP.Net applications, I decided to upgrade to a faster machine, and heck, why not "upgrade" to Vista while I'm at it. What a miserable mistake. Aside from the general aggrivation of everything being in a new place on the machine, I've spent hours just trying to get my Vista machine to find the other two computers on my network. One is the old XP machine, which I'm still using more often, just because it's more efficient with the Powertoys customizations. The other computer is a Mac G4, which I use for my graphic design applications (Adobe CS2). Now, the XP machine and the G4 got along swimmingly until the Vista machine showed up on the scene. I have managed to get the two Windows machines to play nice together, but I absolutely cannot connect Vista to Mac. I get as far as a "Connect to..." authentication pop-up (by typing \\internalIP\MacName into a browser window) but for some incredibly annoying reason, Vista keeps sticking its machine name in front of my Mac username when I try to authenticate. XP doesn't do this, so I'm able to log in to the Mac from XP just by using the Mac credentials. But retarded Vista insists on sticking a domain name in front of the username when attempting to authenticate. It's 2:00am, and I'm too tired to keep screwing around with this. I managed to get no work done as a result of dicking around with my Norton 2007 settings until I could finally connect the two Windows machines (I had to turn off the Norton firewall, which means I get to stare at an annoying, angry Norton icon in the system tray, since it thinks I'm no longer secure). I'm hoping that someone out there has managed to get their Vista machine connected to a Mac running OSX 1.3 and can let me in on the secret. I'm absolutely dumbfounded by Vista. I was expecting something like XP, only slicker and more like a Mac. Instead I get a big headache every time I try do something that really shouldn't be a hassle (don't even ask about installing Visual Studio 2005 on Vista...). -- Barb Bowman MS Windows-MVP Expert Zone & Vista Community Columnist http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ -- Barb Bowman MS Windows-MVP Expert Zone & Vista Community Columnist http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ |
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