G
Guest
I too have been dealing with the issue of XP and Vista playing together, and
believe I have found the overall solution. I would say that I do not know
what the particular issue is, and will also say that I do not think Microsoft
made it easy on us, but thats always part of the learning curve with a new
OS. I would put the solution under what I call best practices, and I need to
do some experimenting yet to remove some of these steps, but if you want to
get XP and Vista to network, here is what I do, and it works:
1. Disable all firewalls - If this is a new Vista pc, from one of the big
box guys, then make sure not only Windows Firewall is off, but also Norton,
etc.
2. Turn on everything in Vista that has to do with sharing, basically all
the fields in the Network and Sharing Center, if it has to do with sharing,
enable it, make it wide open.
3. Make sure each pc has a user account that requires a password logon, and
has the same user name.Yes, I know this causes issues with a users current
configuration and documents location, but again, were trying to get the end
product, which is XP and Vista to play together.
4. On the XP machine, google and download the patch for the LLTD protocol
and bind it to all network adaptors on the XP machine. This is Logical Link
Topology Discovery protocol, that Vista uses to map the network, it does not
come with XP.
With more experimenting, I think the real issue is with the LLTD protocol,
and steps 1-3 are not necessary, but who knows. Also, I think this is a
versioning issue, as I purchased a pc with Vista Home Basic, never had any
problems, did not have this protocol on my XP machines, but it seems like the
issue suddenly came up hard lately on new machines with Vista for my
customers. Hope this helps.
believe I have found the overall solution. I would say that I do not know
what the particular issue is, and will also say that I do not think Microsoft
made it easy on us, but thats always part of the learning curve with a new
OS. I would put the solution under what I call best practices, and I need to
do some experimenting yet to remove some of these steps, but if you want to
get XP and Vista to network, here is what I do, and it works:
1. Disable all firewalls - If this is a new Vista pc, from one of the big
box guys, then make sure not only Windows Firewall is off, but also Norton,
etc.
2. Turn on everything in Vista that has to do with sharing, basically all
the fields in the Network and Sharing Center, if it has to do with sharing,
enable it, make it wide open.
3. Make sure each pc has a user account that requires a password logon, and
has the same user name.Yes, I know this causes issues with a users current
configuration and documents location, but again, were trying to get the end
product, which is XP and Vista to play together.
4. On the XP machine, google and download the patch for the LLTD protocol
and bind it to all network adaptors on the XP machine. This is Logical Link
Topology Discovery protocol, that Vista uses to map the network, it does not
come with XP.
With more experimenting, I think the real issue is with the LLTD protocol,
and steps 1-3 are not necessary, but who knows. Also, I think this is a
versioning issue, as I purchased a pc with Vista Home Basic, never had any
problems, did not have this protocol on my XP machines, but it seems like the
issue suddenly came up hard lately on new machines with Vista for my
customers. Hope this helps.