| Article: |
Windows XP from a Mac Perspective | |
| Subject: | Networking simplicity? Not. | |
| Date: | 2002-02-13 09:34:54 | |
| From: | dogbert | |
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I know you think that XP has improved networking capabilities, but this isn't anything new over what windows 2000 had. Don't forget, windows 2000 and windows XP are pretty much the same at heart. The major difference between xp and windows 2000 is that xp has a "pretty" (if you can call it that) interface and a bunch of wizards.
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Showing messages 1 through 4 of 4.
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Networking simplicity? Not.
2003-09-03 17:12:18 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
In XP you can set up differing network profiles for exactly that situation, you can do similar in W2K using hardware profiles. Read the help files.
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Networking simplicity? Not.
2002-02-13 10:27:57 mchiang [Reply | View]
W2K has the netsh command line tool to configure networks without rebooting. I have a ThinkPad that I use at home with a hardware VPN (static) and on the work network (DHCP). I have a couple batch scripts that use netsh to configure for each network.
Still, this pales in comparison to the Mac OS X location manager. Dang simple. -
Try Netswitcher
2002-02-13 16:52:46 banji [Reply | View]
I am not a Windows user at heart, but like many, I have to use it.
I have found that a shareware app called "Netswitcher" makes life a lot easier when switching between network settings in 2000. It works a lot like "location manager."
Find it at <www.netswitcher.com>
Banji -
Networking simplicity? Not.
2002-02-13 11:04:12 Derrick Story |
[Reply | View]
I think the points in this "networking" thread are well-taken, and I'd like to hear more about XP connectivity from other readers -- pro or con.
As for the Mac OS X Network Control Panel, I can sum up my feelings about it this way: I love it!
With OS X I feel comfortable taking my PowerBook into any networking situation and being able to connect quickly and easily.
There's only one situation where current OS X technology seems to come up short networking-wise. There isn't a PPTP client yet that allows us to use Point to Point Tunneling Protocol on a specific type of secure network. Even then, sometimes we can use ssh via the Terminal Application to get the job done. But a better solution would be straight-up PPTP access.
Hopefully we'll see that soon ...



