Share files and printers across your network
By Kristina Blachere 14/10/2005
Share files and printers across your network
Estimated time required: 1 hour
Estimated cost: US$100 and up
Step 1: Getting started
Now that you have a computer for nearly every room, can a printer for every PC be far behind?
Though sharing broadband is the primary purpose of a home network, sharing files and printers is equally useful. Even if you have more than one printer for different purposes--say, a laser for fast text printing and an inkjet for photos--all of your computers can have access to any one of them. Best of all, it doesn't matter which operating system the computers are running, and you don't need a network printer. Here's how to set it all up.
Step 2: What you'll need
Before you get started with this project, we recommend that you have the following:
- Home network
- Printer server (if your printer is network-capable)
- Printer
Step 3: Create a workgroup
 |
Each computer in a workgroup must have a unique name, but the workgroup name must remain consistent. |
 |
Before you can interact with the other computers in your home, you need to create a workgroup--essentially, a group of computers connected to one another over a network. Here's how to do it.
- 1. Go to Start > Settings > Control Panel > Network Connections > "Set up a home or small office network."
- 2. When asked for a connection method, choose "This computer connects to the Internet through another computer on my network or through a residential gateway."
- 3. Unless you're networking only Windows XP systems, choose "Create a network setup disk" when prompted. This creates a floppy you can use to run the wizard on non-XP systems if you have any on your network.
Now run the wizard on each additional system on your network. On non-XP systems, browse the floppy and run the file netsetup.exe. When configuring each system, assign each computer a different name, but use the same workgroup name. It can be any name you desire. Now that you've created a workgroup, you can begin sharing files and folders among the computers.
|
|