Many thanks for your response. You've opened up a new world to me -- but
I've come to a roadblock again.
First, let me clarify that I can view both the Desktop's and the Laptop's
Alpha folder side-by-side in either computer. I can't do that with the Beta
folder, though. (In real life, there is only one Alpha folder and about
eight Beta's.)
I'm the only user of both computers, so I guess I'm the Administrator, and I
log in as the only named user. (I use the Home Edition of WinXP SP2 and
both computers connect directly to the internet via a DSL modem/router.
In trying to follow your suggestions, the first thing I did was to
START>SEARCH>COMPUTERS on each machine. On Desktop, there are two entries
for Laptop, and on Laptop, there are two entries for Desktop. Why are there
double entries, I wonder? Need I do something about that? If so what --
just delete one of the entries?
Next, I did a search on "permissions" in the START>HELP window and
discovered a new world. I got a long list of hits. I then clicked on
"Grant incoming connection access rights to your computer." That brought
up instructions that began with "Open Network Connections," which I did.
The instructions then say to click on "change settings of this connection"
but I don't have such an item listed under network tasks, so I'm at a dead
end.
Could it be that such an entry exists only in WinXP Pro?
Your last sentence presents a very appealing solution, but I'm a bit
confused about how I can get the computers to treat the newly created
"Network" folder like Alpha rather than Beta -- so that I can do side by
side comparisons of the files and folders in the two Network folders on
either machine.
I would very much appreciate you continuing comments.
"Paul D.Smith" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:4365d981$0$10716$(E-Mail Removed)...
>
> "Joseph Carrier" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:dog9f.1871$(E-Mail Removed)...
>> Thanks for the response.
>>
>> I think unin- and re-installing will be my solution, too.
>>
>> I've now verified that my Firewall program is the culprit: the ability to
>> allow Microsoft Sharing to go through the barrier has somehow vanished
> from
>> its options and can't be reconfigured.
>>
>> So I guess my next step will be to uninstall and reinstall the Firewall
>> Program -- but not all of Windows XP as I've read some have done out of
>> frustration.
>
> Umm, any chance you're using DHCP and the IP address of your machine
> changed? If you set your firewall up to allow "IP address X through" and
> then the IP address changes to "Y" because DHCP expires and assigns you a
> new address, you might see this.
>
> If you suspect this, you could try either of the following...
>
> 1. Modify your firewall settings to allow a subnet through e.g.
> 192.168.0.X
> 2. Get your router/DHCP server to reserve a specific IP address for each
> machine (MAC address) and then no matter what happens, each machine gets
> give the same IP address every time.
>
> Paul DS.
>
>
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