Networking Help
 
Forums: » Register « |  User CP |  Games |  Calendar |  Members |  FAQs |  Sitemap |  Support | 
User Name:
Password:
Remember me
Go Back   Dev Shed ForumsSystem AdministrationNetworking Help

Reply
Add This Thread To:
  Del.icio.us   Digg   Google   Spurl   Blink   Furl   Simpy   Y! MyWeb 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Rate Thread Display Modes
 
Unread Dev Shed Forums Sponsor:
Stay one step ahead of the competition. Evaluate and give feedback on some of the hottest web development tools on the market today. Make your opinion heard! Click Here
  #1  
Old June 20th, 2003, 12:12 PM
grkgqmodel grkgqmodel is offline
Junior Member
Dev Shed Newbie (0 - 499 posts)
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Posts: 1 grkgqmodel User rank is Just a Lowly Private (1 - 20 Reputation Level) 
Time spent in forums: < 1 sec
Reputation Power: 0
Need Help Networking A Desktop and Labtop

I setup my wireless B broadband adapter on three computers, my desktop and labtop with windows xp and my other desktop with windows 98.

Windows 98 Desktop - Wireless USB Adapter
Windows XP Desktop - Notebook Adapter and Wireless Router

All successful ...but here is the problem...I tried networking all three and on the windows xp machines...no computers are showing on my workgroup. How can I successfully network them? Also, on my windows 98 desktop, it says the necessary hardware is not present? I am connected to the wireless router through my usb adapter? I dont get it.

Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old June 20th, 2003, 02:55 PM
nao's Avatar
nao nao is offline
junior vice president
Dev Shed Newbie (0 - 499 posts)
 
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Springfield
Posts: 251 nao User rank is Just a Lowly Private (1 - 20 Reputation Level) 
Time spent in forums: < 1 sec
Reputation Power: 7
WinXP setup disk for 98

Hi,

You need to install some software on your Win98 machines so it'll work on an XP network. XP should create a 'network disk' that you can take to your other (non-XP) machines and install.

Here's what Microsoft Help (XP) has to say about it:

Quote:
Adding a new computer to an existing Windows network If you have an existing Windows network, you may want to add a new Windows XP Home Edition or Windows XP Professional computer.

You must be logged on as an administrator or a member of the Administrators group in order to complete this procedure. If your computer is connected to a network, network policy settings may also prevent you from completing this procedure.

Your home or small office network could have a combination of different Windows operating systems such as Windows 98, Windows 2000 Professional, or Windows Millennium Edition. In addition, you may have Internet Connection Sharing (ICS) or another sharing service, such as a hardware or software gateway, enabled on one of the computers in your home or small office network.

When adding a Windows XP Home Edition or Windows XP Professional computer to your home or small office network, you may want to consider where in the network your computer is going to be. The following questions provide important things to keep in mind:

Am I going to make the new Windows XP computer my ICS host computer and share its Internet connection with the rest of my home or small office network?

Do I want to protect my home or small office network from intrusions and attacks from the Internet? If you are sharing one Internet connection with the rest of your network, you may want to make the Windows XP Home Edition or Windows XP Professional computer your ICS host computer to take advantage of Internet Connection Firewall, which is a new feature included in Windows XP.

Do I have a mixed network environment? If your Windows XP computer has different types of network adapters installed, such as Ethernet, home phoneline network adapter (HPNA), or wireless, you can use the new network bridging feature in Windows XP to create a seamless network.

When you have your new computer set up and physically connected to your network, it is recommended that you run the Windows XP Network Setup Wizard on your new computer. Using the wizard automatically configures the computer so it can participate in the network. If you are making your Windows XP the ICS host computer, during the Network Setup Wizard, create a floppy disk to run the Network Setup Wizard on the Windows 98 or Windows Millennium Edition computers on your network.

Notes

To start the Network Setup Wizard, click Start, point to Settings, click Control Panel, and then double-click Network Connections. Under Common Tasks, click Network Setup Wizard.
If you are making your new Windows XP computer your ICS host computer and want to enable ICS on it, first disable ICS on the computer using Windows 98 Second Edition, Windows Millennium Edition, or Windows 2000. For more information, click Related Topics.

If you are making your Windows XP computer your ICS host computer, run the Network Setup Wizard on the Windows XP computer first. Then, using the floppy disk, run the Network Setup Wizard on the rest of the computers on the network. For more information, see Configure other computers on your network.
The Network Setup Wizard can only be run on computers running Windows XP Home Edition, Windows XP Professional, Windows 98, Windows 98 Second Edition, and Windows Millennium Edition.


Just press F1 on your XP machine and type in Windows 98 - there's a whole lot of other links in there that will help you with your installation.

Reply With Quote
Reply

Viewing: Dev Shed ForumsSystem AdministrationNetworking Help > Need Help Networking A Desktop and Labtop


Thread Tools  Search this Thread 
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes  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

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
View Your Warnings | New Posts | Latest News | Latest Threads | Shoutbox
Forum Jump

 Free IT White Papers!
 
Accelerating Trading Partner Performance
One in five. That's how many partner transactions have at least one error. That is an amazing statistic, particularly given the extraordinary leaps in innovation across the global supply chain during the past two decades. Download this white paper to learn more.

 
Competing on Analytics
This Tech Analysis is designed to help identify characteristics shared by analytics competitors, and includes information about 32 organizations that have made a commitment to quantitative, fact-based analysis.

 
Cost Effective Scaling with Virtualization and Coyote Point Systems
An overview of the industry trend toward virtualization, how server consolidation has increased the importance of application uptime and the steps being taken to integrate load balancing technology with virtualized servers.

 
Five Checkpoints to Implementing IP Telephony
Implementation planning for IP PBX software and IP telephony has become vital as businesses replace discontinued legacy PBX phone systems. This informative whitepaper outlines five "checkpoints" for any implementation plan that will help make IP communications a successful proposition.

 
Hosted Email Security: Staying Ahead of New Threats
In the last two years, email has become a fierce battleground between the nefarious forces of spam and malware, and the heroes of messaging protection. The spam volumes increased alarmingly every month, bringing clever new forms of phishing and virus propagation attacks.

 

Forums: » Register « |  User CP |  Games |  Calendar |  Members |  FAQs |  Sitemap |  Support | 
  
 





© 2003-2008 by Developer Shed. All rights reserved. DS Cluster 5 hosted by Hostway