Can't connect computer to my home network. Help!

J

jasontyip

I am trying to connect my new desktop (running Windows XP Pro) to my
home network consiting of a laptop PC and another desktop PC. All are
connected through a D-Link router. I am able to access the internet
on the new computer through the router but am not able to access/share
files with the other computers on the network. The old computers are
able to do this fine with each other but do not "see" the new
computer. I ran the home network wizard to set it up, but no
success. Any advice on what might be going wrong and what I should do
about it? Thanks.

Jason
 
L

Lem

I am trying to connect my new desktop (running Windows XP Pro) to my
home network consiting of a laptop PC and another desktop PC. All are
connected through a D-Link router. I am able to access the internet
on the new computer through the router but am not able to access/share
files with the other computers on the network. The old computers are
able to do this fine with each other but do not "see" the new
computer. I ran the home network wizard to set it up, but no
success. Any advice on what might be going wrong and what I should do
about it? Thanks.

Jason

It sounds as if the new computer has a software firewall and/or
antivirus with firewall-like features that has not been configured properly.

Standard advice from MS-MVP Malke:

This is most commonly caused by a misconfigured firewall. Run the
Network Setup Wizard on all computers, making sure to enable File &
Printer Sharing, and reboot. The only "gotcha" is that this will turn
on the XPSP2 Windows Firewall. If you aren't running a third-party
firewall or have an antivirus with "Internet Worm Protection" (like
Norton 2005/06) which acts as a firewall, then you're fine. If you have
third-party firewall software, configure it to allow the Local Area
Network traffic as trusted. I usually do this with my firewalls with an
IP range. Ex. would be 192.168.1.0-192.168.1.254. Obviously you would
substitute your correct subnet.

If one or more of the computers is XP Pro:

a. If you need Pro's ability to set fine-grained permissions, turn off
Simple File Sharing (Folder Options>View tab) and create identical user
accounts/passwords on all computers.

b. If you don't care about using Pro's advanced features, leave the
Simple File Sharing enabled.

Simple File Sharing means that Guest (network) is enabled. This means
that anyone without a user account on the target system can use its
resources. This is a security hole but only you can decide if it
matters in your situation.

Then create shares as desired. XP Home does not permit sharing of users'
home directories (My Documents) or Program Files, but you can share
folders inside those directories. A better choice is to simply use the
Shared Documents folder.

If that doesn't work for you, here is an excellent network
troubleshooter by MVP Hans-Georg Michna. Take the time to go through it
and it will usually pinpoint the problem area(s) -
http://winhlp.com/wxnet.htm
 

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