Me again... I incorrectly stated in teh above post that the Vista laptop
network was configured as "public" when indeed it is configured as
"private". I should have also mentioned that "network discovery" is turned
on...
Thanks, Brad
"Brad Pears" <bradp@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:eUtQRaEBIHA.5160@xxxxxx
Quote:
> We are an XP based organization for the most part and use Windwos 2000 and
> Windwos 2003 servers. Our sales people use their own laptops to access our
> server software using terminal services and recently several have upgraded
> or purchased new Vista laptops. This is no big deal as RDP works just fine
> to access our terminal servers still... .
>
> However, one particular salesperson last week wanted to access some
> documents on one of our Windows 2000 file shares from his local laptop. He
> was unable to get there.
>
> I went over and had a peek at his machine for him and I was unable to do
> so as well. This user is running Vista Home Premium. Now, I basically know
> next to nothing about Vista as of yet so I suspect that there is a way to
> do this, I was just unable to figure it out...
>
> I tried mapping a network drive to our domain file share using my domain
> credentials (which is what you can do using the XP Home version which is
> also not "domain" friendly) but it was unable to map the drive. Viewing
> the network shows only his PC - which is kind of what I would have
> expected I guess...
>
> Can anyone give me any ideas as to what I should try or is it just not
> even possible using this version of Vista? (can't imagine that...)
>
> This particular machine connects to our internal LAN using a wireless
> connection and can access our terminal server with no probs using RDP. The
> network is set to "public" NOT private and they are obtaining a dynamic
> IP address from our Win2K DHCP server no probs. I can ping any other
> machine in the network with no probs either. The Vista firewall is
> currently off.
>
> I do not know what else to look for...
>
> Help!
>
> Thanks, Brad
>