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There are two machines that are currently in the domain list, but two others that have remote access enabled that aren't. All machines are part of the same domain. Those who want to email to start a more interactive dialog are welcome to contact me.

2006-08-15 10:12:31 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Computer Networking

All 4 are on the same domain controller, hard wired (ethernet) and behind the firewall. None of them have a firewall running. Static IP's - even trying to connect to the IP doesn't work, though pinging and other forms of connection work fine - they show on the network and can share files and directories just fine.

2006-08-15 10:40:53 · update #1

2 answers

If they are all on the same domain in the same forest. And they are all local machines, it seems to me that they may be on a different sub net or IP Address schema. open a cmd on all your machines then type in ipconfig /all this will show you what the sub net is and the ip address. It they are not on the same ip address schema or subnet you may have set up static ips and if you did you know how to change it. If you did not set up static ips on you machines and you have an DHCP service on your network then in the same cmd do an ipconfig /release then an ipconfig /renew this should solve the problem if all the computers are locally. If they are not locally then there is most likely a configuration problem.

2006-08-15 10:40:17 · answer #1 · answered by big e 2 · 0 0

How are they connecting remotely?

OK, you need to enable remote desktop individually on those machines. If they're running Windows 2000 Server you need to install Terminal Services in remote administration mode.

If they're running Windows Server 2003, enable it on the Remote tab of the System Properties dialogue box.

2006-08-15 17:32:50 · answer #2 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

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