PSN-L Email List Message

Subject: RE: Networking Home Pcs
From: "Stephen Hammond" shammon1@.............
Date: Mon, 30 May 2011 09:48:28 -0700


Hi, network tunneling is used to create a secure connecting between two
system over a network. For example, a business application can use it to
log into a distant system and run a database program from a remote
console application. This "pipe concept" creates the secure pathway to
exchange the commands and data request responses from the main
application that is hosted on the remote "corporation" system. I don't
think you would be using tunneling for your current application. 

Regards, Steve Hammond PSN San Jose

-----Original Message-----
From: psnlist-request@..............
[mailto:psnlist-request@............... On Behalf Of Geoffrey
Sent: Monday, May 30, 2011 2:45 AM
To: psnlist@..............
Subject: Re: Networking Home Pcs


Howdy Bob and PSN;
I try to kill two birds with one stone here.
Thanks for your feedbacks.
I still cant get full view of Win7 From Win XP.
If I get that figured out, Ill keep you posted.
I found that when you share a folder it helps
to give [add] full permissions within that specific folder
to the NETWORK group.
Both Laptop and Desktop are now online with
what seems to be no problems.
I am currently putting my trust into the
hardware router firewall. Have shut down
all other firewalls,
I like to play games online [silly for an adult]
and wonder how this will affect game performance.
What seems nice with windows you can designate only
a single folder for network sharing.
Configuring the Router Firewall is a more intensive
experience than is Windows Firewall.
You got all these protocol and port concepts I never before thought of.
And, WTH is network tunneling, like a tunneling electrons in a fancy
microscope ? Tunneling looks like some kind of security threat.
Bypassing normal whatever.

Prosit,
geoff



-----Original Message----- 
From: Bob Hancock
Sent: Sunday, May 29, 2011 8:24 PM
To: psnlist@..............
Subject: Re: Networking Home Pcs

Hi Geoff -

When I set up a new Win7 computer for a friend, I also used my twoPCs
(WinXP), and a MAC, and I was able to read all the various 
computers from the other computers.  If you can see computer A from B
but cannot see B from A, then I suggest that you look at both 
the hard drive permissions or the workgroup name.  The workgroup name
has to be the same for all connections to work..  Keep is 
simple.  That is where I usually found a problem reading other
computers.

Bob Hancock


On May 29, 2011, at 5:32 AM, Geoffrey wrote:

> Hello Bob and PSN,
>
> It was not as easy for me as for you.
>
> I was finally able to get one computer to see the other but not vice 
> versa. The Win7 machine will see the Win XP Pro machine like it is a 
> part of of Win7 Itself. But the Win XP machine will not acknowledge 
> the existence of the Win7 machine.
>

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