Related topics

Connecting to Home Computer on Wireless Network
Buy a printer to get a "free" network cable. and if your idea of a "home network" is two computers sitting side-by-side. Them two macs would be in a network, and they may well be in somebody's home. So yes, that would be a home network. Not the fastest or bestest I'm sure, but a home network.

POP3 recommendations...
If you have a domain at home, that might be another story, but it doesn't sound like it. If your home network is visible in my net places, and you can surf to a shared printer, you should be able to right-click and connect (if it has the same OS and so the correct driver). The printer may have to be shared to

Converting an Old PC to A server or Buy Home Server?
For example, you might have a home network that connects to the Internet by using a dial-up connection. By enabling Internet connection sharing on the computer After Internet connection sharing is enabled, and users verify their networking and Internet options, home network or small office network users can use

OT: home network woes
I already have a network in the house, and it's been working fine. I installed a 2nd NIC for the cable modem, and bound only TCP/IP to it. The tech set the @home up to use DHCP, and DNS assigned by them. It works great. BUT....when I try to bind TCP/IP to the first NIC (the home network), I loose my connection to

Home Networking, Printer sharing, Never worked, Internet OK
I have three computers I am running on my home network two are running windows xp proffesional and one is running windows xp home edition. I have used the windows network setup wizard on all computers and the two computers that are running windows xp professional are able to see eachother on the network.

Networking windows xp home edition with windows xp professional
Conor conor_tur...@hotmail.com uk comp misc On Sat, 23 Feb 2008 13:38:51 +0000, Lobster wrote: I have a home network consisting of 3 PCs running XP Home. Recently I had to do a full reinstall of XP on one of them (my kids' machine). The PC has (exactly as previously) an admin user account (for me) and a

windows XP - Vista home network
Ian Northeast i...@house-from-hell.demon.co.uk uk net news config Mark Townshend wrote: I would suggest that home networking means, any networking for recreationanl or educational purposes, not for business networks. The original proposal stated that home offices should be covered. I think this should stand.

@Home Network Riddled with Spamholes?
I'm after something like using fetchmail on the server to collect the mail, then probably sort it with procmail before making it available to my home network. The aim is for the mail to remain on the home server - Ie. In one central location on my network. Any recommendations for a POP3 server that would fit into a

Setting up home network with corporate laptop
My question relates to whether one version is better than another for a home network. The home network application is primarily to share DSL access. In this case does it matter whether I have XP Home Edition or XP Pro? A friend said when ordering a computer from the leading direct PC distributor he was told that he

Home Network Trusts
Neerav anonym...@somewhere.com microsoft public windows vista networking_sharing hi. i have set up a home network and have finally learned to share files and folders. please read this carefully... toshiba laptop.... vista business... fully updated desktop............. vista ultimate.....not updated, update fails

Sharing files on Network.
I also plan on sharing my cable modem over the entire network...I plan on putting a shelf in the basement for the cable modem and hub...My questions are, do I need a hub or a router..Will a switch be better than a hub or a router? Also I have read that CAT3 wire is just as good for home networking.

Networking with cable modem from @Home
I am trying to connect two computers in my home network to my store Intranet using RAS. The RAS connection is between a home Windows 2000 Professional machine, and an NT 4.0 Server running RRAS on my store network. In addition, my home network has a Win 98 portable connected to it. I can access the store Intranet

Long pause if I click a network resource that is not in service?
At home I've got several Windows XP Home PCs connected using a Linksys 802.11g wireless network. I would like to be able to access one or more of these PCs (using Remote Desktop Connection) when I'm at work. My ISP is a cable service (Comcast). The client PCs on my home network do not have Static IPs.

Usenet Death Penalty Notice: @Home Network
Networking http://www.akzonobel.co.kr/networking.html Networking an NTL Cable Modem http://www.nigs.net/nigsnet/cmindex.html http://homepage.ntlworld.com/robin. dhwalker/cmtips.html http://www.cable-modems.co.uk/links/ Setting up a Home Network with Linux and a Cable Modem Service

Colorado Slick
Thomp...@csse.monash.edu.au comp os linux networking Hi!, My eth1 is connected to the home network. I gave this an IP address of 192.168.1.1, and tried to connect the rest of the home networks using DHCP as one of the computers is a laptop normally used at work). No luck. Should I be using some separate software to

Win98 with the @home network
Even if I put my machine in the DMZ & then use another machine in my home network to call the router ip, it doesn't work, either from within my home network, or when I use a dial-up connection (only to escape my home network & make it look like I'm coming in from outside).

Home Network and Passwords
(it gave my ip adress below this) The firewall had detected a new private network that your pc is about to join. You may either cose this window or follow the steps in the screen. Step1 Give a name to this network eg (Home Network or Office Network) Step2 Decide if you want to trust other pc's in the network ___ I

Office Move Now SBS Chaos
The PC connecting to the DSL modem should ideally run Win 98 and will need two network cards (NICs). 10 Base-T with RJ-45 jacks are cheapest, 10/100 cards cost a bit more but then no extra cost if you decide to run the home network faster at a later date:-). One NIC is the "external" NIC and will be set

Usenet Death Penalty Notice: @Home Network
JerryI wrote: I have a home network with three computers and I frequently share resources among the computers. Whenever I click anything that happens to be on a computer that is (temporarily) turned off, I have to wait about 45 seconds for a message that I don't have permission to access that resource before I can

PC folder has stopped sharing over network!
Because, just today, in a mixed XP wireless/Vista wired network that, after much more trouble than it was worth, was working apparently reliably, just that happened AGAIN. Today, for no reason, the Vista computer refuses to see the XP computers, which see each other. I check the settings and all is exactly the same