P. Jayant wrote:
> Thanks for your comment. My real concern is:
>
> With the best possible Wireless Network at any cost, created between my PC
> and the new Laptop:
>
> a) will the PC continue to have its XP operating system? I am asking this
> because my video capture card and the data files I have of several graphic,
> audio and video are under XP at present. and I do not want to loose the
> ability to capture videos under XP until I get a video capture card and the
> corresponding software which works under Windows 7 on the new Laptop.
>
> b) Or will the Windows 7 take command of the Wireless network and run both
> the Laptop and the PC under its own Control System? In that situation, would
> I lose the utility of the audio video connection I currently have between
> the PC and the TV/VCR/video camera? Or can a similar link between the Laptop
> and the TV/VCR/videocam be established to replace the existing link?
>
> P. Jayant
>
>
On any home network, wired or wireless, each individual computer is a
separate entity with its own operating system. People can and do have
home networks where the computers have different versions of Windows,
MAC OS, and/or Linux (and probably other operating systems as well).
So, yes, you can network your XP computer and a Win 7 computer -- and
your XP computer will behave the way it always has.
Virtually all home wireless routers permit you to connect computers to
the router either by Ethernet cable or wireless link. Thus, if your
existing computer does not have a wireless adapter, you can connect it
to the router by cable and have a Win 7 computer connected wirelessly
(assuming, of course, that the Win 7 computer has a wireless adapter).
As Jack indicated, if your existing XP computer is connected to your
broadband Internet service via a USB connection, you will have
difficulties. You can still have a network between the XP and Win 7
computers (wired, wireless, or a mixture), but sharing your Internet
connection will be more complex.
If you post back, be sure to indicate which version of XP you have, the
make and model of your existing broadband modem, how it connects to your
XP computer, and whether your existing computer has (a) an Ethernet
network adapter (almost certainly it does) and/or (b) a wireless adapter
(if so, what make/model).
Don't get sidetracked by the "Homegroup" networking feature in Win 7.
That's only for networks where *all* the computers run Win 7.
See
http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/windo...dows-7-and-xp/
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/w...ons-of-Windows
--
Lem
Apollo 11 - 40 years ago:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/ap...0th/index.html