--- Steve Bertrand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> L Goodwin wrote:
> > This is what I was hoping for. Thanks all!
>
> Well, even though this is a FreeBSD list and not a
> Microsoft list, was
> the problem resolved? What fixed it?
>
> > BTW, I did my second successful FreeBSD
> installation
> > th
At 07:40 PM 8/29/2007, L Goodwin wrote:
I apologize for asking this question, but people who
know UNIX often know a lot about operating systems in
general.
I have a client with a Windows 2000 Pro SP4 host. He
cycled power without shutting down Windows, and now
the Windows network (Network Neighb
L Goodwin wrote:
> This is what I was hoping for. Thanks all!
Well, even though this is a FreeBSD list and not a Microsoft list, was
the problem resolved? What fixed it?
> BTW, I did my second successful FreeBSD installation
> this week on a server that I could not get it to run
> on for the long
This is what I was hoping for. Thanks all!
BTW, I did my second successful FreeBSD installation
this week on a server that I could not get it to run
on for the longest time. :-)
--- Garrett Cooper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Steve Bertrand wrote:
> >> What is the "correct" procedure for recover
'kay. Thanks, J.
--- Jonathan Horne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wednesday 29 August 2007 19:40:09 L Goodwin
> wrote:
> > I apologize for asking this question, but people
> who
> > know UNIX often know a lot about operating systems
> in
> > general.
> >
> > I have a client with a Windows 2000
Steve Bertrand wrote:
What is the "correct" procedure for recovering from
this mishap? TIA! :-)
- download FreeBSD disk-1 from freebsd.org
- insert CD into drive, and install :)
Seriously..
It's been a while since I've actually managed a Windows network per-se,
but from what I recall, yo
> What is the "correct" procedure for recovering from
> this mishap? TIA! :-)
- download FreeBSD disk-1 from freebsd.org
- insert CD into drive, and install :)
Seriously..
It's been a while since I've actually managed a Windows network per-se,
but from what I recall, you can change the workgroup
On Wednesday 29 August 2007 19:40:09 L Goodwin wrote:
> I apologize for asking this question, but people who
> know UNIX often know a lot about operating systems in
> general.
>
> I have a client with a Windows 2000 Pro SP4 host. He
> cycled power without shutting down Windows, and now
> the Window
I apologize for asking this question, but people who
know UNIX often know a lot about operating systems in
general.
I have a client with a Windows 2000 Pro SP4 host. He
cycled power without shutting down Windows, and now
the Windows network (Network Neighborhood) is hosed.
When he tries to access