Yes, I have tried with IP address access.
In fact, I usually default to that in all home cases anyway.
"Sachin" wrote:
Quote:
> Ahh, that is right. I should have asked if you tried browsing via IP,
> that is, \\<ip_address>.
>
> Sachin
>
> Chuck [MVP] wrote: Quote:
> > On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 13:15:01 -0800, Helboy <Helboy@xxxxxx>
> > wrote:
> > Quote:
> >> Hello
> >>
> >> I am a reasonably experienced Windows networking user (I have been
> >> networking Windows PCs together since Win 3.1) and also a network engineer.
> >>
> >> Vista has thrown an interesting issue up.
> >>
> >> I have a Juniper SSG 20 router with an ADSL, wifi and Lan interface on it.
> >> The way the Juniper works is it forces the wifi connection to be on a
> >> different subnet than the wired network. So, I have a wired network of
> >> 192.168.1.X and 192.168.2.X for wifi.
> >>
> >> If my PCs are on the same subnet (both on wired or both on wifi), no
> >> problems. I can share and make network shares available.
> >>
> >> If my PCs are on the different networks they cannot see each other and
> >> network shares fail.
> >>
> >> I can ping between the PCs when they are on different subnets, so net
> >> connectivity is there.
> >> I believe that the Juniper is set up correctly (I have set up a
> >> bi-directional trust - any any between the two networks).
> >>
> >> Has Vista introduced a new level of security preventing browsing between
> >> subnets?
> >
> > Browsing between subnets generally requires a domain infrastructure, and a
> > domain master browser on each subnet. Browser SMBs don't generally traverse
> > subnets.
> > <http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/2005/08/browsing-across-subnets.html>
> > http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/2005/0...s-subnets.html
> > >