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    network setup question

    in my house I have:
    an xp desktop and an xp laptop

    I just had to replace hdd / reinstall xp on the xp desktop. When finished, it took me about 10 seconds to 'see' back and forth between the two xp machines, drag and drop files, share printer, all that sort of stuff

    in my house I also have:
    a feisty desktop and a feisty laptop
    I've spent I don't want to know how many hours trying to do the same with my two feisty machines- in fact, I'm now on my third generation of Kubuntu and in two years, I've NEVER been able to make it work

    there has to be an easier way. The "help" I've found on the net is sorta a lot like eating bits of broken gyproc ...

    anyone have a resource that can help me out here?
    WE&#39;RE ALL BETTER OFF WHEN WE&#39;RE ALL BETTER OFF<br />User # 17645

    #2
    Re: network setup question

    Networking Feisty.
    Windows no longer obstructs my view.
    Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
    "It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes

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      #3
      Re: network setup question

      Originally posted by Snowhog
      Networking Feisty.
      it worked!
      thanks much
      but omfg ... what a process! I gotta tell you, if I was just Norman Normal computer user looking into a Windows alternative I'd have stuck with Windows ...
      WE&#39;RE ALL BETTER OFF WHEN WE&#39;RE ALL BETTER OFF<br />User # 17645

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        #4
        Re: network setup question

        Great!

        There are surely other guides that may have been more 'new user' friendly. But, sometimes working with something more than the basics leads to better understanding of what is being done.

        Anyway, I'm glad the link I found was helpful.
        Windows no longer obstructs my view.
        Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
        "It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes

        Comment


          #5
          Re: network setup question

          Originally posted by Snowhog
          sometimes working with something more than the basics leads to better understanding of what is being done.
          I don't have a clue what I did: there's not a word of explanation- just "type this Klingon here". I could go read the man pages, but that's just more Klingon imho.

          In Windoze there's a button to push: "Turn on File and Printer Sharing" right-click an icon, click a radio button, give it a name. Done. I assume everything else happens via a script or piece of code that gets invoked.

          As much as I-my-own-self agree with "working with something more than the basics leads to better understanding of what is being done", the overwhelming majority of users in whatever os don't need "a better understanding of what is being done", don't want "a better understanding of what is being done": they just want it to work and get scared away when forced into "a better understanding of what is being done".

          $.02
          WE&#39;RE ALL BETTER OFF WHEN WE&#39;RE ALL BETTER OFF<br />User # 17645

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            #6
            Re: network setup question

            they just want it to work and get scared away when forced into "a better understanding of what is being done".
            To a point you are right. But if I remember correctly getting networking to just "work" in xp-home (which the majority of people get installed by default when buying a machine from a oem) is quite a daunting task. especially if you know nothing about networking, much less windows networks. Finding a decent support how-to or asomeone to help in general is well.....
            HP Pavilion dv6 core i7 (Main)
            4 GB Ram
            Kubuntu 18.10

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              #7
              Re: network setup question

              Every user is of course, unique. For me, when confronted with a need, and not having the knowledge to get it done, and having tried 'every way I know,' prefer the 'do it this way and it will work' approach. But that said, I try my best to then understand how what I did solved the problem. Almost a backwards engineering type of approach.
              Windows no longer obstructs my view.
              Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
              "It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes

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