Tech Guide: Setting up a Wi-Fi home network

Share and share alike

Sharing a broadband connection is the principal benefit behind most home networks, but installing a wireless network is a great way to share files and printers, too.

In Windows XP, go to Control Panel > Network Connections and click "Set up a home or small office network." When asked for a connection method, choose "This computer connects to the Internet through another computer on my network or through a residential gateway."

Unless you're networking only Windows XP systems, choose "Create a network setup disk" when given the chance. This creates a floppy you can use to run the wizard on non-XP systems.

Now run the wizard on each additional system on your network. On non-XP systems, browse the floppy and run the file netsetup.exe. When configuring each system, assign each PC a different name but use the same workgroup name.

The Network Setup wizard automatically enables sharing on any printer connected to a PC during setup, but before you can use the printer from a networked PC, you'll need to install the printer driver on that system.

Each system configured with the Network Setup wizard should also have at least one shared folder given the name SharedDocs. To access these shared subdirectories within Windows XP, choose Start > My Network Places. You can easily set up additional subdirectories for sharing, but the more directories you share, the more you expose your drive in the event of a security breach.


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Talkback 2 comments

    What about the big picture? Wi ...Anonymous -- 02/07/04

    What about the big picture?
    Wireless is being touted by the Paul Buddes of Australia as being a niche only product/service. Consumers are being led to believe (by what they read) that fixed wire services will always remain supreme over wireless. Anyone with any foresight into the wireless industry will tell you that although this may be true in many instances it is certainly not true in all. Wireless will indeed provide access to delivery of a variety of services without the need for total incumbent infrastrure in areas where this infrastructure exists. The next 2-3 years will see some very exciting new developments in wireless technology and Australians should be made more aware as to the future underlying benefits so that they may prepare themselves now.

    I have been trying to set up a ...Anonymous -- 17/07/04

    I have been trying to set up a home network, The big problem is we can not get ADSL (broadband) we only have ISDN. As a novice i have been to three computer shops and all have sold me product that as they say will work. Well they dont work with ISDN. So i am left with products that are expensive, my daughter cant get onto the internet and i am as frustrated as hell. Could someone tell us how we can do this.
    We have the following:
    1. NT1 Plus 11 ISDN Modem.
    2. Belkin 802.11b wireless router.
    3 Belkin Notbook wirless unit X2 for two notebooks.

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