Quoting Willy Offermans <wi...@offermans.rompen.nl>:

What do you mean with ``connect to the Samba server
in the usual fashion''?

Sorry for not being more specific. By "the usual fashion" I meant using smbpasswd to make an account on the server that has the same name, password and workgroup as on the workstation.

Quoting Jaap Winius <jwin...@umrk.nl>:

... They said to fill in a name and password for the server every time we needed to access the Windows share.

Luckily, this description is not accurate. I eventually discovered that I could map a network drive by making use of the "Connect using a different user name" option. It's stupid, but I thought Samba didn't support this and that it was always necessary to have a Samba account with the same name and password combination as the user's Windows account. That's simply not true.

My wrong impression, formed many years ago, was based on that option's single limitation: it doesn't work when the user name of the Windows account is the same and only the password is different. It really does require that you "Connect using a different user name". Doh!

Quoting Jorell <jore...@fastmail.net>:

Isn't there a check box on windows for mapping a network drive "Connect using different credentials"?

This would have led me to the solution if I hadn't thought of it myself. Thanks very much!

As for samba tricks, give the machine a static IP or a reserved
IP and allow write access from only that IP?

Already taken care of.

Quoting Moray Henderson <moray.hender...@ict-software.org>:

If you have access to the command prompt or the ability to create batch
files, you could try "net use" commands.

Good idea, but it looks like Esaote made sure those options are not available.

Thanks for all your support!

Cheers,

Jaap
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