Networking mac & pc
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‎2004-10-28 02:26 AM
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‎2004-10-28 02:42 AM
aaha! design studio durango, co
27" retina 5k iMac 4ghz i7 os 10.13.6 m395x 4 mb, 32gb ram, 512 gb ssd ac 22 current
15" retina mbp 2.6ghz 1mb 16gb ac 22 current[/size]
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‎2004-10-28 03:12 AM
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‎2004-10-28 06:14 AM
on the mac:
/Applications/Utilities/Keychain Access
find the authentification files for your 'server' and delete it/them
also, run an application on the mac called 'Cocktail' (www.macosxcocktail.com i think) to clear the logs and caches and run the cron maintenance scripts. ('cocktail' is simply a GUI for a whole bunch of unix commands - you may well know how to do this directly from the terminal)
if this still doesn't work, i would say there's a bigger problem on the PC side . . . and there you're on your own!

HTH
~archiben
b f [a t ] p l a n b a r c h i t e c t u r e [d o t] n z
archicad | sketchup! | coffeecup
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‎2004-11-09 11:26 PM
Master of Time and Space
Whenever the wife lets me
A/C27, OSX12.7.5

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‎2004-12-04 01:33 AM
A free alternative to Cocktail is OnyX <http://www.titanium.free.fr/>

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‎2004-12-04 02:06 AM
I added a Mac dual G4 to my network (peer to peer) this week and was pleased with how easy sharing is between OS X and XP, except that I have experienced the following glitch that may be related to your problem:
One of the XP computers on my network is XP Home SP2, the other two are XP Pro SP2. OS X is 10.3.6 with all updates installed.
The Mac always sees the XP Home machine. However, it only sees the XP Pro machine when each machine has been rebooted. If I open an XP shared folder on the Mac and later put the Mac to sleep, not only is the share lost, but when I browse my workgroup, that XP machine is completely gone as well ... the XP Home machine never disappears.
Same security settings on each XP machine for firewall, etc. and each has a password established for accessing the folders.
If you solve this, please post the result. I bought the G4 used with 1 year remaining on AppleCare and am waiting for the AppleCare to get transfered so I can call Apple tech support to figure this out. Maybe you'll resolve it before then.
BTW: I can always access the Mac from the disappearing XP Pro machine, so the suggestion of making the Mac the server might be a way for you to go.
HTH,
Karl

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‎2004-12-07 08:12 PM
We have one shared data folder on the server. (everthing shared, projects, workfiles, shared libraries etc reside there) All machines have full read/write privileges to it. This folder is backed up to one external Firewire hard drive once a day, and to another now and then (should be once a week
For this procedure, we use Silverkeeper on the server (www.silverkeeper.com), a free no-hassle OSX backup program that is maintained by laCie (to sell more drives, I guess).
This set-up has been working flawlessly for more than two years.
The PC is a Dell with XP pro SP2. It's firewall is turned off. But we have a D-link router with firewall built-in to protect the network from external attacs through our ADSL internet link.
One thought. The fact that the machines lose their connection when re-started might have something to do with the way they get their Ethernet network adresses. If they don't have fixed IP adresses, a DHCP server must hand out temporary IP leases every time a machine starts. This is usually done by a hardware or software "router" that has a DHCP server built-in.
In my experience it's a lot more stable to give each machine a fixed local IP network adress (192.168.0.1 etc) than to use DHCP (dynamic address allocation). To make this work along with internet connectivity for all machines, you need a router that has NAT (network address translation) between your network and the Internet. If all machines have fixed IPs set, you can turn DHCP off at the router. If it has a configurable firewall too you get very good protection AND a stable, fast network. Routers are cheap these days. Well worth their money.
Each machine's address is set in its TCP/IP properties in the network control panel (system preferences).
Fixed IPs also makes for faster startup times. And you set up the router for internet by your ISP's instructions as you would a single internet-connected computer.
A tip for configuring any Ethernet network is to download Apple's Designing Airport Networks handbook:
It has a lot of good tips on how to to this, and it explains TCP/IP networks in what I think is the easiest possible way. You don't need an Airport to understand.

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‎2004-12-08 04:23 AM
I've learned a little more since my last post.
For one, there is a bug in OS 10.3.6 that prevents browsing to printers shared by Windows networking. Discussed on Apple forums. Browsing the network finds no printers. 10.3.5 apparently was fine. Holding command while clicking the Add button to add a new printer lets you choose "Advanced" and enter an SMB network address for the shared printer. This seemed to work for people on the chat group ... but hasn't yet for me.
Others have also complained about Windows computers coming and going in Finder. I've found that I can connect to a Windows computer by giving its \\computername address path even when Finder decides not to show it. Haven't needed to enter the static IP address yet, although each Windows machine is static.
Accessing the Mac from Windows is always flawless.
Karl

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‎2004-12-20 06:56 AM

Karl