New
#11
Thanks for your help but still don't work properly!
I disabled KIS on seven and on XP i disabled Avira firewall!
I can access Seven machine files from Xp machine,when I try from Seven machine i can see now XP machine but it gives me error when i try to access files,watch the screenshot!
Like zigzag says:Anybody Have ideas?
Hey visy
that same error code was cured in the vista64 forums here error 0x80070035 - Vista Forums
It is a permissions error. If all else fails set all the permissions back to default and try it again
Ken
I fixed the problem thanks to squonksc,you're amazing!
The problem was TCP/IP NetBIOS Helper service,it was disabled,just enable that service on both machines and everything will work fine!
Have to add to this, that setting the right permissions on the disks and shares is also important.
Also setting passwords on each computer account is vital.
The easiest way is to set permissions is on the whole partition.
Then all folders and subfolders will carry the same permissions.
I also want to point out the difference between share permissions and security permissons.
Best practice for shares is to set to everyone and full permissions.
This will in no way affect the actual files and folders, only the share itself.
In the security tab you set the permissions for the actual folders and files.
If you don't want people in your network to accidently edit or delete the folders or files, set the permissions to "read and execute", "show content" and "read", but not "write" and "full permission".
If you yourself want to be able to edit or delete files and folders in the share,
but not the other users, you will have to create an account for each individual or for a group which is more practical.
You can set permissions per account or per group, and you can make the proper exceptions at folder level.
This will save you the hassle of setting the permissions per folder which can take forever.
NTFS security is a vast and complicated matter.
If people are interested I might be inclined to write a tutorial on it.