G
Guest
I was having a terrible time getting a new Vista workstation to join the
domain at work. The solution for me was to go into the TCP/IP settings on
the Vista machine and make sure the DNS address listed first was that of our
local DC (which is also our file server). The secondary address is that of
our ISP's servers. XP didn't have a problem when only our ISP's DNS address
was listed but Vista needs the DNS address of our server explicitly.
Since our server is also a DHCP server, I could also add our server's DNS
address there and let the workstations stay set to "Obtain DNS server
address automatically".
Hope this will help someone!
Tom Lake
domain at work. The solution for me was to go into the TCP/IP settings on
the Vista machine and make sure the DNS address listed first was that of our
local DC (which is also our file server). The secondary address is that of
our ISP's servers. XP didn't have a problem when only our ISP's DNS address
was listed but Vista needs the DNS address of our server explicitly.
Since our server is also a DHCP server, I could also add our server's DNS
address there and let the workstations stay set to "Obtain DNS server
address automatically".
Hope this will help someone!
Tom Lake