|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
I hope someone can point me in the correct direction. I have a home network
comprised of 3 PC's running XP. They all tak to each other just peachy, and all of them are wired to the same Linksys WG45T wireless router, sharing a broadband cable connection. Here' s where the fun begins. The wife buys a laptop. She uses this laptop at her place of work, where they set it up on a domain system. So, I bought the formentioned wireless router to include her on the workgroup network at home. It connects to the router through the wireless just fine as for the Internet. However, I'm not sure if I will mess up her domain setup if I try to set it up to see our workgroup at home. I know the must be something about this somewhere simple, I'm sure. But somehow I've played with this just about long enough to frustrate myself. Anyone know of an article addressing this, or should I just shell out another $150 for a print server so she can see my printers Thanks for any help you might provide, Ron |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
A machine is either part of a domain or not, it cannot be both. However, a
user can logon as a either a domain-member or as a local user whithout actually taking the computer out of the domain. There s a drop-down on the logon screen which allows this. In general, you could try connecting to resources on your network with NET USE commands, this may work if you provide a username and password on the commandline. Difficult to be more specific, as it would depend on how the domain and workgroup are set-up. HST, if the laptop were my personal property I would be extremely reluctant to allow a domain-admin to effectively take control of the computer away from me. Domain-memebrship is all very well for machines that are company property. |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Tue, 13 Dec 2005 18:28:01 -0800, Captain_Ron wrote:
>I hope someone can point me in the correct direction. I have a home network >comprised of 3 PC's running XP. They all tak to each other just peachy, and >all of them are wired to the same Linksys WG45T wireless router, sharing a >broadband cable connection. Here' s where the fun begins. > >The wife buys a laptop. She uses this laptop at her place of work, where >they set it up on a domain system. So, I bought the formentioned wireless >router to include her on the workgroup network at home. It connects to the >router through the wireless just fine as for the Internet. However, I'm not >sure if I will mess up her domain setup if I try to set it up to see our >workgroup at home. I know the must be something about this somewhere simple, >I'm sure. But somehow I've played with this just about long enough to >frustrate myself. Anyone know of an article addressing this, or should I just >shell out another $150 for a print server so she can see my printers Ron, have a look at http://winhlp.com/wxdomainworkgroup.htm . Hans-Georg -- No mail, please. |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
Also, you can make the domain/workgroup interaction more seamless by
changing the workgroup (probably MSHOME) to the NetBIOS name of the domain - eg. NetBIOS name of domain.com = domain. Also, you may get better results if you log onto the local machine on the laptop instead of the domain. This does not involve unjoining the domain and you can always log back onto the domain. At the login screen simply click the arrow next to the domain name and select <computername> (this computer). If you do not have a domain line, click the Options button. Note you will need to use a local - not domain - account and password to logon this way. Doug Sherman MCSE, MCSA, MCP+I, MVP "Captain_Ron" <Captain_Ron@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:45F243B3-0337-46E8-844D-A98B0EBFFC8D@microsoft.com... > I hope someone can point me in the correct direction. I have a home network > comprised of 3 PC's running XP. They all tak to each other just peachy, and > all of them are wired to the same Linksys WG45T wireless router, sharing a > broadband cable connection. Here' s where the fun begins. > > The wife buys a laptop. She uses this laptop at her place of work, where > they set it up on a domain system. So, I bought the formentioned wireless > router to include her on the workgroup network at home. It connects to the > router through the wireless just fine as for the Internet. However, I'm not > sure if I will mess up her domain setup if I try to set it up to see our > workgroup at home. I know the must be something about this somewhere simple, > I'm sure. But somehow I've played with this just about long enough to > frustrate myself. Anyone know of an article addressing this, or should I just > shell out another $150 for a print server so she can see my printers > > Thanks for any help you might provide, > > Ron |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|