Microsoft Windows XP Professional Resource Kit 2003

Using Windows XP Professional, you can easily set up a home office network between desktops without using a server. Its Microsoft Windows NT style user account management and permissions offer an environment ready-made for secure home and small office networking. You can also integrate other hardware devices such as printers, scanners, or cameras into your home network. The Network Setup Wizard guides you through the process of setting up your home network including Internet Connection Sharing (ICS), naming your workgroup, and naming your computer.

You can use Home Networking to:

In addition, Windows XP Professional is compatible with previous versions of Windows. You can introduce Windows XP Professional into a peer-to-peer network configured between clients running Microsoft Windows 95, Microsoft Windows 98, or Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition (Me), or introduce clients running Windows 95, Windows 98, or Windows Me into a Windows XP Professional network.

You can set up one computer to communicate to the Internet using Internet Connection Sharing. ICS provides access to the public network (the Internet) for all computers in your home network to communicate with the Internet at the same time. The computers that do not have a direct Internet connection, called clients, rely on the host computer to provide access to the Internet. The ICS host computer manages network addressing. Besides providing Internet access, the ICS host computer in your network assigns itself a permanent private address and acts as a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server for ICS clients, assigning a unique address to each ICS client and, therefore, providing a way for computers to communicate with other computers on the network.

For more information about ICS, see Internet Connection Sharing later in this chapter.

Successfully setting up your home network is a two-part process:

  1. Install and configure the appropriate hardware on each computer.

  2. Run the Windows XP Professional Network Setup Wizard on each computer in your home network.

Before you run the Network Setup Wizard, be sure you have addressed these concerns:

Home Network Hardware Requirements

Make sure your network hardware, such as devices and cables, is installed and set up correctly before you run the Network Setup Wizard. When planning your home or small office network, pick the type of hardware to use for connecting your computers. In the business world, the standard network connection technology is Ethernet, which requires a network adapter and dedicated physical cabling. Depending on its complexity, an Ethernet network might also require other interconnecting devices to perform the negotiation the configuration requires.

There are several components that you need to create a home network:

In addition, you ll want to make sure that the computers on your network meet the following minimum requirements:

After you install all of the required hardware in each of your computers, you can run the Home Networking Wizard.

Home Network Configuration Instructions

In Windows XP Professional, setup of the ICS host and client computers is greatly simplified by using the Network Setup Wizard. Run the Network Setup Wizard on the ICS host computer first. Then, run the wizard on the client computers. After you answer some basic questions, the wizard configures the computers to operate correctly on the network.

When running the Network Setup Wizard, be aware of the following:

To configure other computers on your home network

  1. Insert the Windows XP Professional or Windows XP Home Edition operating system CD.

  2. Under What do you want to do?, click Perform additional tasks.

  3. In Perform additional tasks, click Set up a home or small office network.

  4. In the dialog box welcoming you to the Network Setup Wizard, click yes to continue.

  5. Follow the instructions on your screen.

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