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Unexplained Logon Prompt in Home Network
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There are two computers in my house, and they utilise Internet Connection Sharing (ICS) just fine, however there is a problem when trying to access one computer from the other. Computer A (the host computer) can access computer B and share its files, but computer B is asked for logon information when it attempts to browse computer A. I have no idea why it does this, because no one has set any such security on either computer. It isn't the firewall because I've install numerous firewalls since the problem began and it made no difference. Both computers are running Windows XP (one Pro, the other Home). Is there any way I can remove this logon prompting? Noone knows what the password or user name is supposed to be lol...
Thanks
Thanks
1. XP Home and Pro are slightly different beasts when it comes to networking/sharing, and getting the two versions to network correctly can be a pain sometimes. Which machine is running Home and which is running Pro? I'd assume that the ICS machine is the one running Pro, but you know what they say about assumptions....
2. When you enable ICS, Windows automatically enables the Windows firewall; make sure all/any firewalling software is entirely disabled during the course of your troubleshooting.
3. "Noone knows what the password or user name is supposed to be lol..."
The username and password should match those of a user account which exists on the machine you are trying to connect to. Remember: in a workgroup environment there's no centralized authentication (as there is in a domain); for the most trouble-free sharing, you should set up identical user accounts on both machines.
2. When you enable ICS, Windows automatically enables the Windows firewall; make sure all/any firewalling software is entirely disabled during the course of your troubleshooting.
3. "Noone knows what the password or user name is supposed to be lol..."
The username and password should match those of a user account which exists on the machine you are trying to connect to. Remember: in a workgroup environment there's no centralized authentication (as there is in a domain); for the most trouble-free sharing, you should set up identical user accounts on both machines.
"May the Wombat of Happiness snuffle through your underbrush."
- Ancient Aborigine blessing
Please do not contact me by email or PM for help. We're all volunteers here, and only have so much free time to dedicate to our efforts.
However, if I've been working on a thread with you already, and seem to have "forgotten" your thread, please do send me a message. I try not to let things slip through the cracks, but it does happen sometimes.
- Ancient Aborigine blessing
Please do not contact me by email or PM for help. We're all volunteers here, and only have so much free time to dedicate to our efforts.
However, if I've been working on a thread with you already, and seem to have "forgotten" your thread, please do send me a message. I try not to let things slip through the cracks, but it does happen sometimes.
Thanks for the reply DMR 
The thing is, we've successfully set up a home network with full browsing capabilities before, and I'm not exactly sure what we did, you know? hehehe Every time one of us reinstalls Windows the whole thing messes up again.
I've disabled the Windows firewall, on both computers, and I've tried responding to the login prompt by inputting the details of the main computer, but it doesn't accept it.
The computer which connects directly to the net is using XP Pro, and the client (is that right?) computer is using XP Home.
I also remember months ago when we were trying to fix our network that the client computer set up an account with all of the same details as the account I use on the main computer, but it didn't make a difference
I've double-checked all of the little things, like the workgroup names, the shared files/folders permissions, etc., but I haven't come across anything which would address this logon issue.
Any ideas? lol
Thanks for your time

The thing is, we've successfully set up a home network with full browsing capabilities before, and I'm not exactly sure what we did, you know? hehehe Every time one of us reinstalls Windows the whole thing messes up again.
I've disabled the Windows firewall, on both computers, and I've tried responding to the login prompt by inputting the details of the main computer, but it doesn't accept it.
The computer which connects directly to the net is using XP Pro, and the client (is that right?) computer is using XP Home.
I also remember months ago when we were trying to fix our network that the client computer set up an account with all of the same details as the account I use on the main computer, but it didn't make a difference

I've double-checked all of the little things, like the workgroup names, the shared files/folders permissions, etc., but I haven't come across anything which would address this logon issue.
Any ideas? lol
Thanks for your time
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Originally Posted by Paddy
I've tried responding to the login prompt by inputting the details of the main computer, but it doesn't accept it.
I totally agree with Squires on the Simple Filesharing issue- it causes more problems than it solves, and the inability to turn it off really limits your troubleshooting choices. :mad:
Are you using simple file sharing on both machines, or have you disabled it on the XP Pro machine?
"May the Wombat of Happiness snuffle through your underbrush."
- Ancient Aborigine blessing
Please do not contact me by email or PM for help. We're all volunteers here, and only have so much free time to dedicate to our efforts.
However, if I've been working on a thread with you already, and seem to have "forgotten" your thread, please do send me a message. I try not to let things slip through the cracks, but it does happen sometimes.
- Ancient Aborigine blessing
Please do not contact me by email or PM for help. We're all volunteers here, and only have so much free time to dedicate to our efforts.
However, if I've been working on a thread with you already, and seem to have "forgotten" your thread, please do send me a message. I try not to let things slip through the cracks, but it does happen sometimes.
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