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| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
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have a friend that wants to network his two new gateways for home business. I
havent worked with vista much and not at all networking. He has two gateway gt5464 using Vista Home and wants to share the c drive with Quick books Point of sale. Is this possible to network these two and is point of sale available for Vista. Thanks, Joseph |
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talent80 wrote:
have a friend that wants to network his two new gateways for home business. I havent worked with vista much and not at all networking. He has two gateway gt5464 using Vista Home and wants to share the c drive with Quick books Point of sale. Is this possible to network these two and is point of sale available for Vista. Thanks, Joseph It is completely possible to share files/printers between the two Vista machines. Sharing the entire C: drive is a little trickier because it is bad security practice to do so. It is far better to share files in the user directories and/or the Public directory. See below for general networking information for Vista. As for QuickBooks Point of Sale, have your friend contact Intuit tech support for the answer. Excellent, thorough, yet easy to understand article about File/Printer Sharing in Vista. Includes details about sharing printers as well as files and folders: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/l...27037.aspxThis link will take you through Vista networking very well: Here are some general networking tips for home/small networks: 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. If you aren't running a third-party firewall or have an antivirus with "Internet Worm Protection" (like Norton 2006/07) which acts as a firewall, 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. Do not run more than one firewall. B. With earlier Microsoft operating systems, the name of the Workgroup didn't matter. Apparently it does with Vista, so put all computers in the same Workgroup. This is done from the System applet in Control Panel, Computer Name tab. C. Create identical user accounts and passwords on all machines. 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. Create shares as desired. XP Home does not permit sharing of users' home directories (My Documents) or Program Files, but you can share folders inside those directories. A better choice is to simply use the Shared Documents folder. See the first link above for details about Vista sharing. E. To share the root of a drive (not recommended): When you share out the root of a drive in Vista, the UI only allows this through the advanced sharing option. When the advanced sharing option is used it only sets the share permissions. The actual permissions on a file share are a combination of Folder and Share permissions. In Vista the everyone group doesn not have permissions so when you connect without a password the system you can see the folders but not access them or possibly connect to the share but fail to open it. 1. Open Computer 2. Right click on the shared drive and select properties from the context menu 3. Select the Security Tab in the displayed properties sheet. If you are connecting to the computer with no password then you are connecting with the guest account. In order to access the files on the drive, the everyone group needs to have access set here. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |