On Mon, 19 Jul 1999, Lloyd Osten wrote:
I have two computers, one running LM6.0 (this one) and the other one
is running Win98. They are both connected to a cablemodem via a
10BaseT hub. They both have their own separate static IP addresses.
How can I make my Linux box talk to my Win98 box
On Mon, 19 Jul 1999, you wrote:
On Mon, 19 Jul 1999, Lloyd Osten wrote:
I have two computers, one running LM6.0 (this one) and the other one
is running Win98. They are both connected to a cablemodem via a
10BaseT hub. They both have their own separate static IP addresses.
How can I
Lloyd Osten wrote:
I have two computers, one running LM6.0 (this one) and the other one
is running Win98. They are both connected to a cablemodem via a
10BaseT hub. They both have their own separate static IP addresses.
How can I make my Linux box talk to my Win98 box (I'd like to mount
From: Lloyd Osten [EMAIL PROTECTED]
So where do I go from here?
That they can ping is good. Where you need to go from here is to
set up Samba, which will let your win98 box see files/printers/etc on
your Linux box, and smbclient, which will do the same for your Linux
system. There's an
On Mon, 19 Jul 1999, you wrote:
Lloyd Osten wrote:
I have two computers, one running LM6.0 (this one) and the other one
is running Win98. They are both connected to a cablemodem via a
10BaseT hub. They both have their own separate static IP addresses.
How can I make my Linux box talk
Hey, that samba step by step guide, could i get a copy ?
Dan Brown wrote:
From: Lloyd Osten [EMAIL PROTECTED]
So where do I go from here?
That they can ping is good. Where you need to go from here is to
set up Samba, which will let your win98 box see files/printers/etc on
your
From: Mike Ortiz [EMAIL PROTECTED]
implimentation. Is samba a better alternative?
I suppose for a small home network it doesn't make a lot of
difference. For a larger network, where the Linux (or Win) box may need
to integrate with existing standards, it would obviously be more
Hey, that samba step by step guide, could i get a copy ?
Me, too... please?
I could upload it to my website for all to see (if you want).
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I haven't had time to try samba yet. The way I have found to integrate my
pc and linux network is to run pcnfs. It works well, and the setup is
very easy. Like UNIX nfs, you can specify which uid's or which machines
can do what, (eg.. uid 0 on my.host.org may read/write the exported
directory,
From: Morpheus The Sinful Weeper [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hey, that samba step by step guide, could i get a copy ?
It's at http://www.sfu.ca/~yzhang/linux/, along with several other
similarly useful pieces of documentation.
Hey, that samba step by step guide, could i get a copy ?
Me, too... please?
I could upload it to my website for all to see (if you want).
Sorry. I didn't realize it already was on the Internet. From the
context of the letter I replied to, I thought it was a text file someone
had
Lloyd Osten wrote:
On Mon, 19 Jul 1999, you wrote:
Lloyd Osten wrote:
I have two computers, one running LM6.0 (this one) and the other one
is running Win98. They are both connected to a cablemodem via a
10BaseT hub. They both have their own separate static IP addresses.
How
There is also a patch to the system registry for 98. Iwill
make it available tomorrow. It enables plain text passwords.
Samba requires them and 98 is set up to encrypt (could it have been
planned?)
Dan Brown wrote:
From: Lloyd Osten [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> So where do I go from here?
That they
I have a working two computer network with file, print, and internet sharing in
Windows. I would like to have the same thing in Linux, but I know almost nothing about
networking in Linux. Both computers have 2 NIC cards. My internal IP is
192.168.244.132 and the other computer has an IP of
I have installed linux several times. This procedure always works.
1. Edit /etc/smb.conf and change the following
MAKE SURE that the line "workgroup = MYGROUP' is CHANGED to be
"workgroup = (what ever you have in windows under workgroup in
settings-control panel-network-identification"
2.
Ok. Now what drivers do I use for my ethernet card? The autoprobe in the installation
said it was a tulip card. I don't know what that is, but my card is an NDC 10/100 PCI
card. After I went into Linux it seemed fine until every 10 seconds it kept popping up
messages in the console saying
Your card use's the tulip driver.
Go into netcfg and enter your machines IP address and the DNS.
On Fri, 25 Jun 1999 11:20:03 -0700, Jason Riesa wrote:
Ok. Now what drivers do I use for my ethernet card? The autoprobe in the installation
said it was a tulip card. I
don't know what that is,
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