G
Guest
For closure, I discovered...with some help...where the networking
problem I had came from, namely a PC on a network that was not
accessible by other PCs. The message was that permissions don't exist
to allow access.
Well, that was in fact the case. Some application...applet...made
significant Registry changes. Even though the policy controls in XP
Home don't come close to the policy management in XP Pro, there are a
lot of policy entries in the Registry of XP Home. Somehow, these had
been rewritten. Not sure how. Only solution was a complete wipe,
re-format, and re-load of XP.
One symptom was that Windows Firewall was not accessible in the
affected PC....the firewall settings were permanently greyed out. By
incrementally deleting the policies, the firewall settings became
accessible and changeable. Unfortunately, this did nothing to impact
the network permissions issue.
That's it. Some issues are not resolvable because they are the result
of malicious intent. Time to punt. Thanks, Chuck, for your support.
Henry
problem I had came from, namely a PC on a network that was not
accessible by other PCs. The message was that permissions don't exist
to allow access.
Well, that was in fact the case. Some application...applet...made
significant Registry changes. Even though the policy controls in XP
Home don't come close to the policy management in XP Pro, there are a
lot of policy entries in the Registry of XP Home. Somehow, these had
been rewritten. Not sure how. Only solution was a complete wipe,
re-format, and re-load of XP.
One symptom was that Windows Firewall was not accessible in the
affected PC....the firewall settings were permanently greyed out. By
incrementally deleting the policies, the firewall settings became
accessible and changeable. Unfortunately, this did nothing to impact
the network permissions issue.
That's it. Some issues are not resolvable because they are the result
of malicious intent. Time to punt. Thanks, Chuck, for your support.
Henry