Londell wrote:
> I am having a problem and I hope someone can help. I was setting up my
> friends home network. This is what my network is setup as.
>
> 1. Toshiba laptop running WINXP Home with wireless card built into it
> 2. Dell laptop running Windows 2000 Pro with a Belkin 802.11g wirless
> card. 3. I also have a Pc Running Win 2000 Pro with a linksys ethernet
> card on the mother board.
>
> All three are connected to a Belknin 80211g wireless router. the pc
> and the Dell laptop which both are running 2000 Pro have a default
> network name WORKGROUP. I have a internet connection on all both
> laptops and on the pc. However I am not able to connect to each pc on
> the network. When ever I try to connect to the other pc or laptop I
> get the following :On the Pc and laptop running 2000 pro I get an
> error message that says "Network path not found" and on the laptop
> running Winxp Home I get "Not accessible. Check to make sure you have
> permissions to use this resource"
>
> The thing is. I have this same exact wireless router and wirelss card
> setup in my home. The only difference is I have 2 pcs and one laptop.
> 1 Pc is running Winxp Home and the other is running Win 2000 Pro. the
> laptop is running Win 2000 Pro. And all of my pc and laptop van see
> each other. I can acces files and printers and everything. Does anyone
> have any suggestions as to what I might be missing
Things to check:
1. Did you make identical user accounts and passwords on all three
machines? You need to do this in a mixed-os workgroup network.
2. Did you share out desired resources, making sure permissions are
correct?
3. Did you configure all firewalls to allow lan traffic as Trusted? If
your XP Home machine has Service Pack 2, SP2 automatically enables the
Windows Firewall. If you are not running a third-party firewall, go to
the Windows Firewall applet in Control Panel and enable File & Printer
Sharing on the Exceptions tab. If you are using a third-party firewall
(and have properly configured it to allow your lan traffic as Trusted),
then turn the Windows Firewall off. You don't want two firewalls
running, and a third-party program will be better than the WF.
Here is a link to an excellent network troubleshooter by MVP Hans-Georg
Michna. Run through it and then if you need more help, post the
results.
http://www.michna.com/kb/wxnet.htm
Malke
--
MS MVP - Windows Shell/User
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
"Don't Panic!"