OK, I think now that there is more than one issue.
After reviewing the fact that older Windows PC's have great difficulties
connecting to Vista shares, I thought then that it probably shouldn't be
surprising that this is very difficult to impossible for the MS-DOS
Network Client.
To test this
Yes, in the static setup. And when I have had it configured instead in
DHCP mode, I would expect it to pick that up automatically.
On 6/16/2015 11:07 AM, Dave Kerber wrote:
> But does your client machine know that? I.E. do you have the DNS server
> configured in the network settings?
>
>
>> ---
But does your client machine know that? I.E. do you have the DNS server
configured in the network settings?
> -Original Message-
> From: John Hupp [mailto:free...@prpcompany.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2015 10:42 AM
> To: Discussion and general questions about FreeDOS.
> Subject: Re:
The router provides DNS.
On 6/16/2015 10:39 AM, Dave Kerber wrote:
> Do you have a DNS server configured?
>
>
>
>> -Original Message-
>> From: John Hupp [mailto:free...@prpcompany.com]
>> Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2015 9:48 AM
>> To: Discussion and general questions about FreeDOS.
>> Subject
Do you have a DNS server configured?
> -Original Message-
> From: John Hupp [mailto:free...@prpcompany.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2015 9:48 AM
> To: Discussion and general questions about FreeDOS.
> Subject: Re: [Freedos-user] Networking: With MS Client, "Error 5:
> Access has been d
Here's a reference, by the way, on the ipconfig usage that I mention
below: ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/misc1/BUSSYS/LANMAN/KB/Q183/8/58.TXT
A couple more observations:
When I booted up this morning, "ipconfig c:\net" once again reported the
lease expired, but the expiration time coincided exactly