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samba

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Kevin A.
Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 8:07 am
Guest
I have a xp machine networked with a mdk 10.0 machine. I can see the shared
files from the xp machine which are on the linux machine, but I can't access
them. I can access the xp machine from the linux machine.

TIA
 
Herman Viaene
Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 9:01 am
Guest
Kevin A. wrote:

Quote:
I have a xp machine networked with a mdk 10.0 machine. I can see the
shared files from the xp machine which are on the linux machine, but I
can't access
them. I can access the xp machine from the linux machine.

TIA

Doe eens een search op samba in Google in deze groep of in
alt.os.linux.mandrake.
Zulke vraag is al tientallen keer gesteld en beantwoord.

Herman Viaene
--
Veel mensen danken hun goed geweten aan hun slecht geheugen. (G. Bomans)

Lots of people owe their good conscience to their bad memory (G. Bomans)
 
Herman Viaene
Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 9:05 am
Guest
Herman Viaene wrote:

Quote:
Kevin A. wrote:

I have a xp machine networked with a mdk 10.0 machine. I can see the
shared files from the xp machine which are on the linux machine, but I
can't access
them. I can access the xp machine from the linux machine.

TIA

Doe eens een search op samba in Google in deze groep of in
alt.os.linux.mandrake.
Zulke vraag is al tientallen keer gesteld en beantwoord.

Herman Viaene

Sorry, I answered thinking I was on the be.comp.os.linux newsgroup, here it
goes again:
please use google to search this newsgroup on samba , this question has been
asked and answered over and over again

Herman Viaene
--
Veel mensen danken hun goed geweten aan hun slecht geheugen. (G. Bomans)

Lots of people owe their good conscience to their bad memory (G. Bomans)
 
Kevin A.
Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 9:46 am
Guest
What gives you the right to tell me what I can and can't post here? Just
because it's been posted before doesn't mean that I don't have a right to
post about it again. As a matter of fact, I have posted before about this
same thing and I've yet to get a working solution. I was hoping that
someone might come up with a 'working' solution this time. Also, I've
googled samba about every googling way possible.

My question to you is this Herman - What gives you the right to delegate
what anybody posts here as long as it is done with proper netiquette?

Have a great day Sir!

"Herman Viaene" <herman@thuis.be> wrote in message
news:n-OdnRKbleQkJpHfRVnyuQ@edpnet.net...
Quote:
Herman Viaene wrote:

Kevin A. wrote:

I have a xp machine networked with a mdk 10.0 machine. I can see the
shared files from the xp machine which are on the linux machine, but I
can't access
them. I can access the xp machine from the linux machine.

TIA

Doe eens een search op samba in Google in deze groep of in
alt.os.linux.mandrake.
Zulke vraag is al tientallen keer gesteld en beantwoord.

Herman Viaene

Sorry, I answered thinking I was on the be.comp.os.linux newsgroup, here
it
goes again:
please use google to search this newsgroup on samba , this question has
been
asked and answered over and over again

Herman Viaene
--
Veel mensen danken hun goed geweten aan hun slecht geheugen. (G. Bomans)

Lots of people owe their good conscience to their bad memory (G. Bomans)
 
Jo Malik
Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 10:07 am
Guest
Kevin A. wrote:

Quote:
I have a xp machine networked with a mdk 10.0 machine. I can see the
shared files from the xp machine which are on the linux machine, but I
can't access
them. I can access the xp machine from the linux machine.

TIA

man samba
man smbpasswd
www.samba.org
and man google

cu
--
That is not dead which can eternal lie
And with strange aeons even death may die.
 
Herman Viaene
Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 11:24 am
Guest
Kevin A. wrote:

Quote:
What gives you the right to tell me what I can and can't post here? Just
because it's been posted before doesn't mean that I don't have a right to
post about it again. As a matter of fact, I have posted before about this
same thing and I've yet to get a working solution. I was hoping that
someone might come up with a 'working' solution this time. Also, I've
googled samba about every googling way possible.

My question to you is this Herman - What gives you the right to delegate
what anybody posts here as long as it is done with proper netiquette?

Have a great day Sir!

I'm sorry if I offended you, that's not what I had in mind. I have been
trying to help people out in the past, and it goes most of the time about
the same problems, hence .......

Now if you post again, you could be much clearer on the issue:
what have you done to get the samba server going (installed users ....),
what is your samba.conf file looking like, what message do you get on the
XP machine.

Herman Viaene

--
Veel mensen danken hun goed geweten aan hun slecht geheugen. (G. Bomans)

Lots of people owe their good conscience to their bad memory (G. Bomans)
 
chris
Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 2:56 pm
Guest
Kevin A. wrote:

Quote:
What gives you the right to tell me what I can and can't post here? Just
because it's been posted before doesn't mean that I don't have a right to
post about it again. As a matter of fact, I have posted before about this
same thing and I've yet to get a working solution. I was hoping that
someone might come up with a 'working' solution this time. Also, I've
googled samba about every googling way possible.

My question to you is this Herman - What gives you the right to delegate
what anybody posts here as long as it is done with proper netiquette?

It wasn't correct netiquette - your question has been exhaustively answered
in this (and other) groups. If you can't understand the answers, perhaps
you need to rephrase your question. Samba is trivially easy to set up, and
if you can't perhaps you should revert to another "operating system"

C.

--
Everything gets easier with practice, except getting up in the morning!
 
Dan C
Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 3:49 pm
Guest
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 14:46:16 +0000, Kevin A. wrote:

Quote:
What gives you the right to tell me what I can and can't post here? Just
because it's been posted before doesn't mean that I don't have a right to
post about it again.

....Sigh...

Quote:
My question to you is this Herman - What gives you the right to delegate
what anybody posts here as long as it is done with proper netiquette?

He's not "delegating" anything... (might want to look that one up in a
dictionary...). As for netiquette, you did not follow it TWICE in your
post. First - it is NOT proper netiquette to ask a question which has
been asked (and answered) REPEATEDLY in this and other newsgroups. A
simple search back through the posts (either with your newsreader, or with
Google Groups) would have answered your question many times over.
Secondly, you are TOP-POSTING, which (in my opinion) is one of the worst
netiquette violations. To illustrate that, read the following:

A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such an annoying thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing on usenet?

Get the picture?

Oh yeah, and thirdly, you are posting from M$ Outhouse Excuse, which gives
you no credibility or standing whatsoever.

Get your act together before posting again.

--
If you're not on the edge, you're taking up too much space.
Linux Registered User #327951
 
Kevin A.
Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 10:20 pm
Guest
"Kevin A." <kevin@altizer.org> wrote in message
news:j62Pd.1733$VI1.183478@twister.southeast.rr.com...
Quote:
I have a xp machine networked with a mdk 10.0 machine. I can see the
shared files from the xp machine which are on the linux machine, but I
can't access them. I can access the xp machine from the linux machine.

TIA

I apologize for what I said. I'm sorry, I was wrong for bashing out at you
Herman.

Kevin A.
 
Andy J.
Posted: Sat Feb 12, 2005 10:25 am
Guest
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 14:49:37 -0600, Dan C <youmustbejoking@invalid.lan>
wrote:

Quote:
Oh yeah, and thirdly, you are posting from M$ Outhouse Excuse.

Dan,

How on Earth do you know which OS or application someone is using to post?
I've seen people mention it before and wondered how.

Andy J.
 
Peter T. Breuer
Posted: Sat Feb 12, 2005 10:48 am
Guest
Andy J. <andrew@home.pcy.net> wrote:
Quote:
How on Earth do you know which OS or application someone is using to post?
I've seen people mention it before and wondered how.

It taints the electrons. You can recognise the spin it imparts. It's
usually the other way up from reality. The electrons get a component
in the anti-charm direction, as well as a resonance in the FUD domain.

Peter
 
Andy J.
Posted: Sat Feb 12, 2005 11:41 am
Guest
On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 16:48:19 +0100, Peter T. Breuer <ptb@lab.it.uc3m.es>
wrote:

Quote:
It taints the electrons. You can recognise the spin it imparts. It's
usually the other way up from reality. The electrons get a component
in the anti-charm direction, as well as a resonance in the FUD domain.

Ah, but that assumes one knows the original colour of an electron !!

Andy J.
 
Dan C
Posted: Sat Feb 12, 2005 12:07 pm
Guest
On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 15:25:13 +0000, Andy J. wrote:

Quote:
How on Earth do you know which OS or application someone is using to post?
I've seen people mention it before and wondered how.

Basically by telling your newsreader program to display the "header" line
that indicates the poster's newsreader. Usually the common name for this
header is "User Agent" or "X-Newsreader". It varies in each newsreader's
setup, just look through your options/preferences/settings.

Some newsreaders (like Pan which I am using) have a single key toggle
which allows me to see ALL the headers of a post. This includes things
like the poster's IP address, ISP, where to send abuse complaints to, and
much more. Check it out.

P.S. - Peter's answer is also correct... ;-)

--
If you're not on the edge, you're taking up too much space.
Linux Registered User #327951
 
Jim Townsend
Posted: Sat Feb 12, 2005 12:14 pm
Guest
Andy J. wrote:

Quote:
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 14:49:37 -0600, Dan C <youmustbejoking@invalid.lan
wrote:

Oh yeah, and thirdly, you are posting from M$ Outhouse Excuse.

Dan,

How on Earth do you know which OS or application someone is using to post?
I've seen people mention it before and wondered how.

Andy J.

It's usually in the message header... You're posting with:

Opera M2(BETA1)/8.00 (Linux, build 913)

I'm using Knode, (But I've turned off the feature that adds it
to my headers so you can't see what I'm using :)

Knode allows you to taylor which info from the header appears
above the message I'm reading. I see a lot more than To: From:
and subject..

Below is what I have Knode set up to display above the messages I
read..

------------------
Re: samba
From: Andy J. <andrew@home.pcy.net>
Date: Saturday 12 February 2005 09:25:13 am
Groups: alt.os.linux.mandrake
NNTP-Posting-Host: 81-86-226-20.dsl.pipex.com
User-Agent: Opera M2(BETA1)/8.00 (Linux, build 913)
References: 1 2 3 4 5
 
Andy J.
Posted: Sat Feb 12, 2005 1:18 pm
Guest
Cheers Peter, Dan & Jim,

I've never tried the 'Display All Headers' in newsgroups before. I've had
a look and I don't think Opera is as configurable as K-Node. Maybe I'll
switch to that, the trouble is I've got really used to the Opera
mouse-gestures.

Andy J.
 
 
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