BudPritchard
Member

Registered: Apr 2000
Location: St Petersburg Fla
Posts: 224 |
Re: Help, I'm hairless
quote: Originally posted by ovaltine
Okay, I have just pulled the last clump of hair out my head. Not really, but home networking is driving me to drink. Quite simply put, I have no idea how to do it.
I feel your pain. Been through the same swamp.
quote:
I have followed what seems like five hundred different sets of directions at this point.
These sites were helpful to me:
http://www.homepcnetwork.com/
http://www.practicallynetworked.com/
quote:
I am trying to share an internet connection between a desktop running windows me and a laptop running windows xp. The desktop is already connected to the internet via a dsl modem. I have installed two nic (?) cards on the desktop and have purchased a router. My vaio laptop has an integrated ethernet jack.
You do not need two nic cards on the desktop. Only one to connect to the router. The router will connect to the dsl modem and the laptop.
I would strongly suggest upgrading the desktop to XP Pro. Windows ME just doesn't make it as an "internet server".
The cost of the upgrade is worth the lesser aggravation.
quote:
Does anyone have any advice how to set this up? Thanks in advance.
I had a laptop and desktop both running Win98SE networked via Intel anypoint phoneline hardware. Laptop used the parallel port interface.
Worked great! Internet access speed on the laptop was great!
Got a new P4 Dell desktop with XP Pro. The Intel hardware was scrapped as it did not play well with XP.
Upgraded laptop to XP home. Found it ran better than 98SE.
Upgraded network to Netgear phoneline PCI on desktop and USB on laptop. Worked great!!!!
EXCEPT......I deleted the default Guest account on the desktop after the network was up and running. Laptop refused to connect to desktop. Found out via collegue at work that the Guest account is required for networking. Go figure! Anyway, had to make a registry entry of ForcedGuest=1 (do a registry search, can't remember the location.).
Then the network was fat and happy.
Bottom line is:
Networking XP to XP is a lot easier than XP to Win98, 2000, ME.
However, the Network Wizard ISN'T. When it works, everything is OK, when it doesn't, it gives you zero advice on what is wrong.
Don't get me started on how most error messages are about as useful as a teat on a bull!!!!!!
I wish you good luck. If you are successful, consider yourself a network engineer by trial and error.
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