R
Ralph Malph
I have 2 Win XP Home systems, one a VAIO P4 with plenty of HD space
and 256 Mb ram, the other a Toshiba Notebook with 512 Mb Ram and
plenty of HD space. I want the VAIO to play Host to the Toshiba. I
have several shares, the C drive Root, and several shared Document
folders, and 2 shared printers, on the VAIO. The VAIO C Drive is a Fat
32. There are no other systems in the equation. There is no firewall.
There is a Linksys Wireless router which is connected to the Notebook
via wireless and to the VAIO via a cable. I can ping both systems in
both directions. I can see the shared resources on both systems in
either directions. I can access a drive shared on the Toshiba with the
VAIO, but I can not access the shared drive and other shared resources
on the VAIO from the Toshiba. I have done everything by the book. I
have re-done everything by the book, I have doted all my I's and
crossed all my T's. I even created a client disk using the Network
Connection Wizard, and loaded it on the Toshiba Laptop. Both are
running SP1. I have been connecting systems together for many years
and have not ran into a problem quite like this. I have users with
matching login names and passwords and Full Admin rights on both
systems.
The error message is as follows:
\\vaio\c is not accessible. You might not have permission to use this
network resource. Contact the Administrator of this server to find out
if you have access permissions.
Not enough server storage is available to process this command.
I have seen the 1st three sentences many times before, and would just
login to the resource using a name and password with admin rights. In
this setup I get no prompt for login info. This being 2 XP Home
systems all I can activate is "simple networking". I never seen the
last sentence about server storage before. I looked it up in the MS
Knowledge base but all references were for the old NT systems , and
they talked about a Reg. Setting that does not exist in the XP Home
systems.
I have run out of Ideas and would greatly appreciate all the help I
can get in solving this problem. Any Ideas ???????
Thanks in advance,
Ralph Malph
and 256 Mb ram, the other a Toshiba Notebook with 512 Mb Ram and
plenty of HD space. I want the VAIO to play Host to the Toshiba. I
have several shares, the C drive Root, and several shared Document
folders, and 2 shared printers, on the VAIO. The VAIO C Drive is a Fat
32. There are no other systems in the equation. There is no firewall.
There is a Linksys Wireless router which is connected to the Notebook
via wireless and to the VAIO via a cable. I can ping both systems in
both directions. I can see the shared resources on both systems in
either directions. I can access a drive shared on the Toshiba with the
VAIO, but I can not access the shared drive and other shared resources
on the VAIO from the Toshiba. I have done everything by the book. I
have re-done everything by the book, I have doted all my I's and
crossed all my T's. I even created a client disk using the Network
Connection Wizard, and loaded it on the Toshiba Laptop. Both are
running SP1. I have been connecting systems together for many years
and have not ran into a problem quite like this. I have users with
matching login names and passwords and Full Admin rights on both
systems.
The error message is as follows:
\\vaio\c is not accessible. You might not have permission to use this
network resource. Contact the Administrator of this server to find out
if you have access permissions.
Not enough server storage is available to process this command.
I have seen the 1st three sentences many times before, and would just
login to the resource using a name and password with admin rights. In
this setup I get no prompt for login info. This being 2 XP Home
systems all I can activate is "simple networking". I never seen the
last sentence about server storage before. I looked it up in the MS
Knowledge base but all references were for the old NT systems , and
they talked about a Reg. Setting that does not exist in the XP Home
systems.
I have run out of Ideas and would greatly appreciate all the help I
can get in solving this problem. Any Ideas ???????
Thanks in advance,
Ralph Malph