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I have just bought a new laptop running Vista and added it to our home
network (called MSHome) which has two PCs running Windows XP. I have shared the Public folders on the laptop supposedly without restrictions (no username or password required) and both PCs can see the laptop through 'my network places'. One of the PCs can access the laptop Public folders without any problem. The other PC asks for the laptop's username and password before allowing access to the laptop's Public Folder. Why? (The laptop can also access this PC's shared folders without any problem.) |
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Gillian wrote:
I have just bought a new laptop running Vista and added it to our home network (called MSHome) which has two PCs running Windows XP. I have shared the Public folders on the laptop supposedly without restrictions (no username or password required) and both PCs can see the laptop through 'my network places'. One of the PCs can access the laptop Public folders without any problem. The other PC asks for the laptop's username and password before allowing access to the laptop's Public Folder. Why? (The laptop can also access this PC's shared folders without any problem.) Your post got me a little tangled as to which machine asks for a username/password from whom, but this is simply solved. Create identical user accounts and passwords on all machines and authentication will be taken care of. If you didn't create passwords in your user accounts, please do so. You can set the machines to automatically log into a desired user account if you like. Do this in Vista the same way as it is done in XP: Configure Windows to Automatically Login (MVP Ramesh) - http://windowsxp.mvps.org/Autologon.htm Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
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Hi Malke,
At the moment, the Vista laptop is the only computer with a user account password and I have just bought it for my business (I'm self-employed working both from home and from clients' premises). Of the two original Windows XP PCs one belongs to me personally (I just switch it on and it starts without asking for a user name or password) and the other PC is my husband's and starts the same way. My husband's PC can access my laptop Public folders without being prompted for a password, but my PC is prompted for the laptop's username and password. Even if we have to give all 3 computers the the same username and password (I'd rather not) I'd still like to know why one PC has access to the laptop and the other doesn't when their settings would appear to be the same. "Malke" wrote: Gillian wrote: I have just bought a new laptop running Vista and added it to our home network (called MSHome) which has two PCs running Windows XP. I have shared the Public folders on the laptop supposedly without restrictions (no username or password required) and both PCs can see the laptop through 'my network places'. One of the PCs can access the laptop Public folders without any problem. The other PC asks for the laptop's username and password before allowing access to the laptop's Public Folder. Why? (The laptop can also access this PC's shared folders without any problem.) Your post got me a little tangled as to which machine asks for a username/password from whom, but this is simply solved. Create identical user accounts and passwords on all machines and authentication will be taken care of. If you didn't create passwords in your user accounts, please do so. You can set the machines to automatically log into a desired user account if you like. Do this in Vista the same way as it is done in XP: Configure Windows to Automatically Login (MVP Ramesh) - http://windowsxp.mvps.org/Autologon.htm Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
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Gillian wrote:
Hi Malke, At the moment, the Vista laptop is the only computer with a user account password and I have just bought it for my business (I'm self-employed working both from home and from clients' premises). Of the two original Windows XP PCs one belongs to me personally (I just switch it on and it starts without asking for a user name or password) and the other PC is my husband's and starts the same way. My husband's PC can access my laptop Public folders without being prompted for a password, but my PC is prompted for the laptop's username and password. Even if we have to give all 3 computers the the same username and password (I'd rather not) I'd still like to know why one PC has access to the laptop and the other doesn't when their settings would appear to be the same. The answer is that you are misunderstanding how multi-user operating systems (XP, Vista, Linux, Unix, OS X) really work. You *do* have a user account on your personal computers - you just don't realize it. Your home machine is probably XP Home and you are using the generic "Owner" type of user account set up by the OEM (Dell, HP, etc.). Either that or someone set it up to automatically log into your user account with the same process I already gave you in my first post. Go to the User Accounts applet on each computer and you will see the user accounts on the systems. If you have XP Home and only one user account (such as "Owner" or the like), you will not see the built-in Administrator account there because it is hidden by design. There is no reason not to create identical user accounts/passwords on all three machines. You only have three machines so this is not an onerous task and your network sharing will now work. You do not need to be logged into the same accounts on all three machines; the accounts simply need to exist. In a peer-to-peer network (as opposed to a domain with a server), called a "Workgroup" in the Windows world, authentication is done on the local computer. In simplistic metaphorical terms, this means that: 1. Computer A requests access to a shared network resource from Computer B. 2. Computer B looks at its list of user accounts and passwords (rather like someone at the door checking your invitation to an exclusive party). If there is a match, then Computer B allows access. If there is no match, then Computer B asks Computer A to provide the name and password of a user who *does* have access. Hope this helped, Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
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http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/l.../bb727037.aspx
The above read might help. "Gillian" wrote: I have just bought a new laptop running Vista and added it to our home network (called MSHome) which has two PCs running Windows XP. I have shared the Public folders on the laptop supposedly without restrictions (no username or password required) and both PCs can see the laptop through 'my network places'. One of the PCs can access the laptop Public folders without any problem. The other PC asks for the laptop's username and password before allowing access to the laptop's Public Folder. Why? (The laptop can also access this PC's shared folders without any problem.) |
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