----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve Bostedor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "William Hooper" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Wednesday, March 19, 2003 5:14 PM Subject: RE: Problem connecting with net name on Windows XP
> I don't want to take this off-line because the rest of the community will miss what I am saying and it is an important tip that could help a lot of people out. If for some odd reason, I'm off my rocker and I am spewing non-sense into the list, the worst that will happen is that someone will have one extra protocol in their list. :) This conversation is way OT for this list, as you your self admit that NetBEUI isn't required by VNC. Having an extra protocol be very annoying if you are trying to troubleshoot other issues. > NetBEUI resolves names on a network by broadcasting and receiving those broadcasts. You are correct, NetBEUI is not directly required by VNC, but if you wish to connect to another computer by using the name and you don't have a DNS server and do not wish to use a hosts file, NETBEUI is for you. NetBIOS also resolves names on a network by broadcasting: NetBIOS Name-Resolution Basics http://www.microsoft.com/technet/treeview/default.asp?url=/technet/prodtechn ol/winxppro/reskit/prjj_ipa_jhzw.asp (watch for URL wrapping) > It appears that you are confusing the role of NETBIOS with NETBEUI. You mentioned that NETBEUI is on another transport than TCP/IP but in fact, NETBIOS is the transport layer protocol and NETBEUI is at the network layer. NetBIOS is concerned with setting up sessions and transporting the data. NETBEUI is concerned with things like name resolution and network mapping. I believe you are confusing NetBIOS and NetBEUI. NetBIOS (Network Basic Input/Output System) is run over a transport protocol (ie. TCP/IP or IPX). NetBEUI (NetBIOS Extended User Interface) provides NetBIOS over it's own transport protocol. > Microsoft is dropping NETBEUI in order to push everybody to their Active Directory. It still works great for home LAN's as a quick and dirty name resolution protocol. I do have direct experience mixing Win9x and XP and properly configured NETBEUI is, in fact, required for them to see each other. There is a knowledge base article on it, but I don't have time to go dig it up right now. I hope that everybody understands why I suggest to install NETBEUI, now. > - Steve Bostedor > http://www.vncscan.com Microsoft is dropping NetBEUI because it is a non-routable, non-scalable hack. NetBEUI is no more required in a mixed Win9x/WinXP environment than it is in a mixed Win9x/WinNT environment. Oh, and the original poster didn't have a mixed environment, it was two WinXP machines. I would be very interested in seeing this knowledge base article, because a number of people disagree with you. Some examples: http://www.practicallynetworked.com/sharing/xp/addxp.htm http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&selm=uhH0oe%23aCHA.4200%4 0tkmsftngp08 (Again URL wrap) I have personally never installed NetBEUI on WinXP (or needed it on Win9x, WinNT, or Win2k other than for compatibility with an old DOS client that only ran NetBEUI). NetBEUI is a crutch that will come back to haunt you when a) you decided to use an operating system that Microsoft didn't produce or b) you decided to upgrade to whatever the next Windows version is and NetBEUI is gone. -- William Hooper Some people are only alive because it is illegal to kill _______________________________________________ VNC-List mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list