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Windows XP Workgroup Connectivity
I was told to make the Workgroup name on both computers the same and create a User on my computer with the same name & password as my wife's. Once you've logged in using your domain account (using cached credentials), and have an IP address on the home network, you can map drives, use printers, whatnot,

Unable to browse
1000 is available in the LDAP Directory, joining normal Workstations with root's credentials is possible. The filer's root account has the same Windows Workgroup authentication using the filer's user accounts. 3. /etc/passwd and/or NIS based authentication. What type of authentication will this filer use?

domain and workgroup
ServerB = workgroup server I'm trying to connect to. I can do this fine, as long as ServerB is connected to a domain, and I use domain credentials to However, if ServerB is part of a workgroup and I try to use the local admin credentials of ServerB in the ConnectServer method, I get "Access is Denied" with an

LDAP and user credentials
I am wondering if anyone knows what might be lingering on my system from having converted it from a domain to a workgroup. as I've about hit a brick wall with things to try and look at on this issue), I am thinking that my user credentials are somehow screwed up due to the domain to workgroup conversion.

Need help connecting a w2k server to a workgroup
Thank you for the response, Scott "Scott Harding - MS MVP" wrote: The cached credential should be gone as it now in a workgroup. This is a very common issue. Once you get the machine working back on the domain at work your only real fix would be to make your workgroup at homew the same name as your domain name at

validating user credentials to a workgroup computer
When we start a saved connection from the Dells the corresponding window lists the user name as "(none)" and the message below that says, "You will be asked for credentials when you connect." The pcs all connect from the same workgroup to the same server. Since the Lenovo's WVB saves the credentials and the Dells'

Save Credentials not working (File Sharing)
Bill Grant bill_grant_at_bigpond_dot_com microsoft public windows server networking If a machine is in a workgroup and the workgroup name matches a domain name, joining the domain, because the workgroup/username/password matches the domain/username/password, and the domain accepts the workgroup credentials.

VPN Client side question
Win2K will use cached credentials to log you on, and you can use offline files to access LAN data while disconnected. (If you are not using DHCP in both locations to assign TCP/IP settings, then you have to do a little work there.) You can still connect to workgroup shares by name even when you are a member of an

SMS Clients in Workgroup on Different Network
Credit to MVP Lanwench: Note - you don't need to change to a workgroup just to access resources on it. You shouldn't play with your laptop's network settings at all. Once you've logged in using your domain account (using cached credentials), and have an IP address on the home network, you can map drives,

Accessing shared folder in a Workgroup from the domain
The computers are all in workgroup Tony, I used the following script: ------------- Script Start ------------- ' specify account to create strAccount = "newAdmin" I used AdminScriptEditor to package this as an EXE and specified the alternative credentials (local admin account) in the Script Packager section.

WSUS 3.0 Admin Console Authentication in Workgroup
You
should be able to access workgroup related files from the W2K laptop, but not vice versa... You would need to explicitly access them (via \\SERVERNAME\SHARE and supply user credentials in the form of COMPUTERNAME\USERNAME). The best solution is to use a product like NetSwitcher (www.netswitcher.com) that allows

Print/File sharing between a domain PC to workgroup PC
Q: How can I keep my domain profile when logging on home network Thanks to cached credentials, you may have two options: 1) create the home network's workgroup name as the same as the domain network at work and make sure ever thing works, and then join the computer to the domain at work.

logon failures - system's computer account in it's primary ...
You can access the Win98 machine because they do not use security and hence do not need to vailidate your login credentials. The Win2K computer shows that the Win98 PC's are part of the local workgroup and that workgroup name comes up when trying to access the network from the Win2K box so it knows what

Domains and Workgroup
Slimline sliml...@mindspring.com microsoft public win2000 active_directory Go back to the workgroup config and point the finger at the new config for not Never heard of cached credentials? Actually - not, but explain please. When you log on to a Windows domain (2000 or NT), the logon info is stored on the

How do I add a network user to the security permissions on a ...
5) Likewise, Username and Password should be same for Workgroup and Domain (same question as above) Same answer. 6) Cache Domain login credentials (not sure where this is done or if it is absolutely required) Yep. Absolutely necessary unless you have a local admin account on the computer. Without a cached login you

How do I copy files in workgroup
Additionally, I’m prompted for credentials anywhere from 2 to 4 (random) times on password protected sharepoint sites. For these password-protected sharepoint sites the logon prompts default to these entries and in this order: workgroup\administrator (ISA 2006 server isn’t joined to a domain) VAIO-FE\ryanv (vaio-fe

Linux mount of exported W2k disk drive
I have a simple WORKGROUP based setup where all computers on my family workgroup have access to the same shared resources on one 'server' computer. is it's own world and trusts nothing else and you can't create a trust between stand alones. As long as you have identical credentials, you can make it work. Ace.

Is it possible to "remember" log in credentials? (Many MDB's ...
... José Antonio Muñoz <joseanto...@obispadocadiz.org> writes The machine is a work group and the user and password used to logon the same to the logon on the communicator. Since the machine is in a work group, you are not using domain credentials to logon. Therefore you get prompted. This is by desgin!

Domain Controller and Workgroup in SBS
Larry lsmith999...@nospam.nospam microsoft public platformsdk security is there any way to validate through network local user credentials (user and password) of a workgroup computer? scenario: compA has a user: "userA". is there any way to validate "userA" on compA from computer B (either workgroup or domain

Exchange 2003 on workgroup network
For users that continue to provide invalid credentials, ISA will prompt twice more; if they fail to authenticate, ISA will reject the request. I tried to "mirror" these "workgroup" (altough they are not workgroup accounts - they are local accounts on domain members. just to make sure we are talking about same