PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

Make external HD "universally accessible"?

 
 
JoeSpareBedroom
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      10th Aug 2010
A while back, I needed to share my external Seagate HD across a small
network and I wanted a bit of security. That function is no longer needed.
Now, I want to be able to plug the HD into any computer without having to
fuss with permission, and not have to fuss with access control (for the HD).
I don't want to mess with the networking settings on those computers. These
are guys in my band, so trust isn't an issue, and I'm walking away with my
HD when I'm done giving them tunes.

Or, to put it another way, I want the HD to behave like it did when it came
out of the box. Not sure how to revert to that state. What's happening now
is that when I plug into any machine except my own and try to access the HD,
I get a "Not accessible" msg.

On my own computer, if I right click on this external HD, choose properties,
and then the Sharing tab, I see that "Share this folder" is selected, and
there's a share name, E$. If I simply choose "Do not share this folder",
will this accomplish the necessary goal?


 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
John Wunderlich
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      10th Aug 2010
"JoeSpareBedroom" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
news:uEf8o.3847$(E-Mail Removed):

> A while back, I needed to share my external Seagate HD across a
> small network and I wanted a bit of security. That function is no
> longer needed. Now, I want to be able to plug the HD into any
> computer without having to fuss with permission, and not have to
> fuss with access control (for the HD). I don't want to mess with
> the networking settings on those computers. These are guys in my
> band, so trust isn't an issue, and I'm walking away with my HD
> when I'm done giving them tunes.
>
> Or, to put it another way, I want the HD to behave like it did
> when it came out of the box. Not sure how to revert to that state.
> What's happening now is that when I plug into any machine except
> my own and try to access the HD, I get a "Not accessible" msg.
>
> On my own computer, if I right click on this external HD, choose
> properties, and then the Sharing tab, I see that "Share this
> folder" is selected, and there's a share name, E$. If I simply
> choose "Do not share this folder", will this accomplish the
> necessary goal?
>


Making the assumption that you are talking about an external USB
Drive that at one time was attached to one machine and shared on a
network and you now want to remove it from the network and walk
it around to other machines ...

There is probably two ways you can do this. One way is to connect
it to the computer that recognizes it then right-click on the drive
and select "Properties". Then click on the "Security" tab. (If you
don't have a Security tab, then you probably have Windows Home and
have to boot your machine to Safe Mode to get the Security tab).
After clicking the Security tab, click "Advanced" and then click
"Add" and add the user "Everyone". Edit the permissions for
"Everyone" as you see fit, then check the "Replace permission
entries on child objects.." box and "OK" your way out.

The other method is to reformat your drive as FAT-32. If your drive
is more than 32 Gigabytes, then you must use a 3rd party tool.
FAT-32 disks can't store individual files greater than 4 GB
in size.

See article:
"Formatting a Large Drive Greater Than 32GB with a FAT32 File System
Using Seagate DiscWizard"
<http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/crm/selfservice/search.jsp?DocId=200895&NewLang=en>

HTH,
John
 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
JoeSpareBedroom
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      11th Aug 2010
"John Wunderlich" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:Xns9DD080A0FEDECwunderpsdrscray@138.125.254.103...
> "JoeSpareBedroom" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
> news:uEf8o.3847$(E-Mail Removed):
>
>> A while back, I needed to share my external Seagate HD across a
>> small network and I wanted a bit of security. That function is no
>> longer needed. Now, I want to be able to plug the HD into any
>> computer without having to fuss with permission, and not have to
>> fuss with access control (for the HD). I don't want to mess with
>> the networking settings on those computers. These are guys in my
>> band, so trust isn't an issue, and I'm walking away with my HD
>> when I'm done giving them tunes.
>>
>> Or, to put it another way, I want the HD to behave like it did
>> when it came out of the box. Not sure how to revert to that state.
>> What's happening now is that when I plug into any machine except
>> my own and try to access the HD, I get a "Not accessible" msg.
>>
>> On my own computer, if I right click on this external HD, choose
>> properties, and then the Sharing tab, I see that "Share this
>> folder" is selected, and there's a share name, E$. If I simply
>> choose "Do not share this folder", will this accomplish the
>> necessary goal?
>>

>
> Making the assumption that you are talking about an external USB
> Drive that at one time was attached to one machine and shared on a
> network and you now want to remove it from the network and walk
> it around to other machines ...
>
> There is probably two ways you can do this. One way is to connect
> it to the computer that recognizes it then right-click on the drive
> and select "Properties". Then click on the "Security" tab. (If you
> don't have a Security tab, then you probably have Windows Home and
> have to boot your machine to Safe Mode to get the Security tab).
> After clicking the Security tab, click "Advanced" and then click
> "Add" and add the user "Everyone". Edit the permissions for
> "Everyone" as you see fit, then check the "Replace permission
> entries on child objects.." box and "OK" your way out.
>


Yes, it's a USB drive. OS is XP Pro w/SP3. It's formatted as NTFS and I'm
unlikely to change that unless someone's got a gun to my child's head.

Thanks for method #1. I'll be testing it tomorrow, unless I can stop a
complete stranger on the street this evening.





 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
External DVD Rewriters and External Hard Drives roycegracie General 0 29th Apr 2005 11:05 AM
Internal Vs. External IP Addresses : Cannot Use External Addresses Internally Craig P Microsoft Windows 2000 Networking 2 23rd Aug 2004 05:25 PM
New USB 2.0 WD 80GB External HD Not Recognized (external power) =?Utf-8?B?Um9iZXJ0YWNo?= Windows XP General 13 24th Jul 2004 07:26 AM
Using External/Non External Data pw034 Microsoft Excel Discussion 1 24th May 2004 06:36 PM
ad setup for dns? howto external + external. Gene Microsoft Windows 2000 Active Directory 0 28th Aug 2003 11:47 PM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:13 AM.