![]() |
|
Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
This will sound like all the recent vista share connection issues except with
a twist. First a description of home network equipment. The router is an SMC model with usb print server. The PC's include a two year old home desktop with XP Media Center edition, a Vista Home Basic laptop purchased last June, a brand new Vista Home Premium laptop received in the last two weeks, a PIII 866 desktop with Win2K and lastly an ancient Thinkpad laptop with Win2K. Until the Home Premium machine showed up ALL of the other machines could see each other and file copying could be performed in any direction. The Thinkpad finally died and was the reason for the new Home Premium purchase. I configured the premium machine same as all the others with workgroup name etc and one of the first things I tried was to connect to my biggest share source on the XP desktop. I click the machine name which shows in the Network window and get a login window. I type the same name and password to login to the share as I always have from any other machine and the window refreshes with an error message about user unknown. In the name field I noticed that the path\name changes to \\LAPTOP_NAME\Mark? The window itself still shows the desktop machines name in the border across the top? I've tried changing the path to \\Desktop_name\Mark and receive the same error message about user unknown. I have done a ton of research and seen all the stuff about current issues and patch suggestions with the LLDT upgrade on the XP machine. I have not installed that upgrade and here is why. I have the premium machines firewall/sharing etc settings set identical to my daughters out of the box home basic machine and her machine can connect to the XP machines shares all day long???? Any suggestions would certainly be appreciated. TIA. - Mark |
|
|||
|
have the exact same problem trying to get a new vista home premium laptop to
access shares on xp pro machines. I have installed the LLDT on a couple of xp machines. I don't think it has any functionality other than to let Vista create a graphical map of your network that includes the xp machines. There seem to be a lot these problems in recent days (but no solutions). Could a patch that microsoft pushed out on windows update be the cause of this? Or has this problem always existed? -- Regards, MattK "MarkinGA" wrote: This will sound like all the recent vista share connection issues except with a twist. First a description of home network equipment. The router is an SMC model with usb print server. The PC's include a two year old home desktop with XP Media Center edition, a Vista Home Basic laptop purchased last June, a brand new Vista Home Premium laptop received in the last two weeks, a PIII 866 desktop with Win2K and lastly an ancient Thinkpad laptop with Win2K. Until the Home Premium machine showed up ALL of the other machines could see each other and file copying could be performed in any direction. The Thinkpad finally died and was the reason for the new Home Premium purchase. I configured the premium machine same as all the others with workgroup name etc and one of the first things I tried was to connect to my biggest share source on the XP desktop. I click the machine name which shows in the Network window and get a login window. I type the same name and password to login to the share as I always have from any other machine and the window refreshes with an error message about user unknown. In the name field I noticed that the path\name changes to \\LAPTOP_NAME\Mark? The window itself still shows the desktop machines name in the border across the top? I've tried changing the path to \\Desktop_name\Mark and receive the same error message about user unknown. I have done a ton of research and seen all the stuff about current issues and patch suggestions with the LLDT upgrade on the XP machine. I have not installed that upgrade and here is why. I have the premium machines firewall/sharing etc settings set identical to my daughters out of the box home basic machine and her machine can connect to the XP machines shares all day long???? Any suggestions would certainly be appreciated. TIA. - Mark |
|
|||
|
You may want to create the same username e.g. mark on all computers. Or this
search result may help. Vista Permission IssuesCan I assume the external drive used to be connecting to other computer and you just re-connect it the the Vista? Check the permission using this command: . ... www.chicagotech.net/vista/vistapermission.htm -- 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 "MarkinGA" wrote in message ... This will sound like all the recent vista share connection issues except with a twist. First a description of home network equipment. The router is an SMC model with usb print server. The PC's include a two year old home desktop with XP Media Center edition, a Vista Home Basic laptop purchased last June, a brand new Vista Home Premium laptop received in the last two weeks, a PIII 866 desktop with Win2K and lastly an ancient Thinkpad laptop with Win2K. Until the Home Premium machine showed up ALL of the other machines could see each other and file copying could be performed in any direction. The Thinkpad finally died and was the reason for the new Home Premium purchase. I configured the premium machine same as all the others with workgroup name etc and one of the first things I tried was to connect to my biggest share source on the XP desktop. I click the machine name which shows in the Network window and get a login window. I type the same name and password to login to the share as I always have from any other machine and the window refreshes with an error message about user unknown. In the name field I noticed that the path\name changes to \\LAPTOP_NAME\Mark? The window itself still shows the desktop machines name in the border across the top? I've tried changing the path to \\Desktop_name\Mark and receive the same error message about user unknown. I have done a ton of research and seen all the stuff about current issues and patch suggestions with the LLDT upgrade on the XP machine. I have not installed that upgrade and here is why. I have the premium machines firewall/sharing etc settings set identical to my daughters out of the box home basic machine and her machine can connect to the XP machines shares all day long???? Any suggestions would certainly be appreciated. TIA. - Mark |
|
|||
|
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:16:19 -0800, MarkinGA
wrote: This will sound like all the recent vista share connection issues except with a twist. First a description of home network equipment. The router is an SMC model with usb print server. The PC's include a two year old home desktop with XP Media Center edition, a Vista Home Basic laptop purchased last June, a brand new Vista Home Premium laptop received in the last two weeks, a PIII 866 desktop with Win2K and lastly an ancient Thinkpad laptop with Win2K. Until the Home Premium machine showed up ALL of the other machines could see each other and file copying could be performed in any direction. The Thinkpad finally died and was the reason for the new Home Premium purchase. I configured the premium machine same as all the others with workgroup name etc and one of the first things I tried was to connect to my biggest share source on the XP desktop. I click the machine name which shows in the Network window and get a login window. I type the same name and password to login to the share as I always have from any other machine and the window refreshes with an error message about user unknown. In the name field I noticed that the path\name changes to \\LAPTOP_NAME\Mark? The window itself still shows the desktop machines name in the border across the top? I've tried changing the path to \\Desktop_name\Mark and receive the same error message about user unknown. I have done a ton of research and seen all the stuff about current issues and patch suggestions with the LLDT upgrade on the XP machine. I have not installed that upgrade and here is why. I have the premium machines firewall/sharing etc settings set identical to my daughters out of the box home basic machine and her machine can connect to the XP machines shares all day long???? Any suggestions would certainly be appreciated. TIA. - Mark Mark, If introducing a different computer into the mix is the primary cause of a problem, I'd suspect a segmented browse domain caused by a master browser conflict. If you wish, you can read about the NT browser (no, we're not discussing Internet Explorer or a competitor). The browser lets each computer "see" the others. http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/2005/04/nt-browser-or-why-cant-i-always-see.html http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/2005/0...lways-see.html Note that LLTD gives Vista computers the ability to see other computers running either Windows Vista or Windows XP - not Windows 2000. And that ability in the Network Map only, not Windows Explorer (nka "Network"). http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/2006/12/windows-xp-and-vista-on-lan-together.html http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/2006/1...-together.html If you like, you can diagnose the problem using logs from "browstat status" and "ipconfig /all". Read this article, and linked articles, and follow instructions precisely (Download browstat, and note how to start a command window under Windows Vista!): http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/2005/05/troubleshooting-network-neighborhood.html#AskingForHelp http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/2005/0...#AskingForHelp -- Cheers, Chuck, MS-MVP 2005-2007 [Windows - Networking] http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/ Paranoia is not a problem, when it's a normal response from experience. My email is AT DOT actual address pchuck mvps org. |