G
Guest
Hi,
I have two computers networked through a router. Internet access is perfect.
Acess to the public folder on Vista2 from Vista1 is perfect. Printing from
Vista2 to the printer on Vista1 is perfect.
What I want to do is to backup a partition on Vista1 to a partition on
Vista2 using Acronis.
So I created a partition on Vista2 to hold the image which Acronis would
create. I next 'Shared' this partition. Acronis can see Vista2 from Vista1,
and also the shared partition is visible.
But it is impossible to operate on the shared partition. I get the message
that the partition is not accessible and that I may not have premission etc.
Going from My Computer>Network>Vista2> reveals the shared partition as an
icon. But again , it is not accessible.
I have spent several hours following the guidelines in "Windows Vista Inside
Out", but without success in solving my difficulty.
Please advise me how to gain access permission from Vista1 to the shared
partition on Vista2. I run as an Administrator on both computers.
Thank you,
Roy Mayo.
I have two computers networked through a router. Internet access is perfect.
Acess to the public folder on Vista2 from Vista1 is perfect. Printing from
Vista2 to the printer on Vista1 is perfect.
What I want to do is to backup a partition on Vista1 to a partition on
Vista2 using Acronis.
So I created a partition on Vista2 to hold the image which Acronis would
create. I next 'Shared' this partition. Acronis can see Vista2 from Vista1,
and also the shared partition is visible.
But it is impossible to operate on the shared partition. I get the message
that the partition is not accessible and that I may not have premission etc.
Going from My Computer>Network>Vista2> reveals the shared partition as an
icon. But again , it is not accessible.
I have spent several hours following the guidelines in "Windows Vista Inside
Out", but without success in solving my difficulty.
Please advise me how to gain access permission from Vista1 to the shared
partition on Vista2. I run as an Administrator on both computers.
Thank you,
Roy Mayo.