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Originally Posted by laurel2626
I am trying to move files from an old laptop to a new one. I have a RJ-45 cable and had no problems setting up a network connection allowing incoming connections on the old laptop, but when I go to create a network connection on the new laptop it only offers me the option to accept incoming connections, the option to connect directly to the other computer is shaded out.
I tried creating a connection to accept incoming connections, but even then it wouldn't allow me to use a direct parallel cable but only the modem!
Obviously I am missing something, but what?
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Originally Posted by Techy
Laurel,
This should be simple, for some reason windows tries to make it more difficult than necessary.
First off as suggested above make sure that your using a cross-over RJ45 network cable as apposed to a straight through (or patch) cable.
Then just set the first machine network adapter with an IP of 192.168.0.1 and the second machines network adapter as 192.168.0.2.
Then on the source machine (the one your moving data from) share a folder then from the destination machine goto run and type the UNC path eg, \\SOURCEPC\SharedFolder (where source PC is the name of the first computer and sharedfolder is the name of the folder you shared on the source)
Then simply copy or move the data to a location on the destination machine.
J
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Probably the dead-on solution for what you're after. I don't know where you are but if you're in the States you can probably get a free scrap cross-over cable from a networking shop, or for a 6-footer at most it might cost a couple bucks. If they charge more than that call them cheapskates. Back in the day (before i knew anything about anything) I had the exact same problem. By the bye, cross-over cables are perfect in a multi-machine environment when you only use one of the boxes most of the time but you still need to swap files once a month or something. Really cheap, really secure (as long as you keep the network isolated).
HTH
chris.