barrpeople
Technical User
I have networked 10 PC's with a mix of Win98, ME, NT and XP operating systems and in general this works fine, all PC's seeing each other and sharing files etc.
I then introduced a D-Link 301P+ print server to enable me to share an ink jet printer between the networked PC's.
The problem is that the Win 98, Win ME, and Win NT machines all see the print server on the network but the XP machines refuse to recognise its existence. Pinging from an XP machine returns no lost data but does not acknowledge the server exists. Is this another XP problem or am I doing something silly here?
I have tried installing the print server on the XP machines as a "local" printer on a TCP/IP port which is what XP advises me to do. However, the print server installs easily as a "network printer" under Win 98,ME and NT. How is that for non-compatibility.
I have had a look to see if the XP machines are firewalled but they appear not. All the networked machines can talk to the internet through a switch and ISDN router - each PC has IP addressing and DNS addressing set up and all this works fine.
So I have a real dilemma here. Could it be Microsoft putting limitations on home networking so that we are forced into buying their expensive server software?
Any help here would be appreciated.
Regards
Dave Barr - School IT Co-ordinator
I then introduced a D-Link 301P+ print server to enable me to share an ink jet printer between the networked PC's.
The problem is that the Win 98, Win ME, and Win NT machines all see the print server on the network but the XP machines refuse to recognise its existence. Pinging from an XP machine returns no lost data but does not acknowledge the server exists. Is this another XP problem or am I doing something silly here?
I have tried installing the print server on the XP machines as a "local" printer on a TCP/IP port which is what XP advises me to do. However, the print server installs easily as a "network printer" under Win 98,ME and NT. How is that for non-compatibility.
I have had a look to see if the XP machines are firewalled but they appear not. All the networked machines can talk to the internet through a switch and ISDN router - each PC has IP addressing and DNS addressing set up and all this works fine.
So I have a real dilemma here. Could it be Microsoft putting limitations on home networking so that we are forced into buying their expensive server software?
Any help here would be appreciated.
Regards
Dave Barr - School IT Co-ordinator