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Mario D N A Rar For Mac

Mario D N A Rar For Mac

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Last night I installed Vista Home Premium on a machine that previously had XP Media Center. Today I go to access my G3 computer and it asks for user/pass which is fine, it asked in XP as well.

I enter my pass, just like I did in XP, and it returns an error saying 'Logon Unsuccessful: Windows could not log you on. Be sure that your username and password are correct.' Nothing on the G3 has changed since yesterday when XP worked.

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I've also noted that when it fails it changes my username from 'sngx1275' to 'MAIN sngx1275'. I'm not sure this is a problem, but thought it should be noted. It is a possiblity that Windows needs a reboot. At first when I opened the Network it said I had file sharing and network explorer or something off, so I turned it on.

I think XP usually wants a reboot after that, but Vista didn't ask. So I could reboot, and probably should, but I'm doing something important now that I can't reboot the computer. Read the article. But it doesn't say what the failure mode is.

My little 'workaround' to this at the moment is to take the rar'd files the G3 downloads and drag to the Windows share. Then extract on the Windows machine to a different dir, then delete the directory that was copied. It works, but it requires me to actually be at the G3. Much less convenient than browsing the share, right clicking on the rar and extracting to the local machine through the network. Edit: I do have a Powerbook running 10.4.9, I could try a share on that and see if I can get in. If it is the Samba issue I should get the same problem. 10.4.9 might have newer Samba, and also it could be something else screwed up in Windows, so I'm not sure if it is going to tell us anything.

I'll try it anyway. Edit2: Found which gives a solution, I'll try it tonight. Basically Vista made it more difficult to get to an OS X share, and possibly killed network performance between the 2 compared to XP.

Hooray Vista!! Nah, normally (in XP) I just had a shortcut to the G3, click that it prompts for user pass, I enter it and I'm in.

(unless the G3s IP changed, in which case I'd browse to it in the network and create a new shortcut). But now I click and it prompts for user pass and I have done the following with no positive results: User as sngx1275 in the user box, password in password User as 192.168.1.102 sngx1275 in user box, password in password User as 192.168.1.102sngx1275 in user box, password in password manually entering 192.168.1.102 sngx1275 in the address bar, that prompts up the user pass box where I have tried the 2 above techniques I have a feeling we aren't on the same page here, because you keep asking or saying things that don't really fit with what I'm trying to do. So here goes again.

I want to get to my G3, which has the local IP of 192.168.1.102 my username is sngx1275. I want to get in to there with that username and my password. In the past (XP) this would bring up all the folders, and I have full read write privs, from there I open the folder I want, and extract the files over the network to my Windows box. I CAN browse my Vista machine from the G3 just fine, but that is not what I am wanting to do. I tried the link I provided above, with no success. Earlier today I saw some information while I was looking for a solution and it involved editing the registry, and someone mentioned it wasn't even in Vista Home Premium, so I'm going to investigate that further.

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Another little piece of information is that I just tried to get to my Powerbook, by double clicking on it in the Network in Vista (Both the G3 and the Powerbook show up) and it prompts for user pass just like it does for the G3, and I enter them and I get let right in. So there may be some fundamental differences in how 10.4 vs 10.3 handles networking, either that or I have them set up differently. But the bottom line is something broke in Vista and is preventing access to the G3 like the way it did in XP or the way it does now for the Powerbook. It just seemed like you weren't understanding what I was saying, and I just moments before got XP up and running on my A64 machine, so I got the idea to take screenies. Then I fought with MS Paint to crop the things to what I wanted, ugh. Should have just taken the time to put Irfanview on.

I'll look around some more later for the registry hack to get this Vista box to do what I want. I suppose I could just extract over the network to the A64 machine and deal with the stuff there. But that really isn't what I want to do, and its arguably easier to drop it to Vista from OS X, which again isn't what I need. EDIT: FIXED IT!! The site that had me typing in 192.168.1.102sngx1275 has some problems with ' ' displaying so thats why I attempted that (didn't think about them screwing that up at the time), but that site also has the reg hack.

Which is how I fixed it. So I'm going to put the fix here. In regedit: Navigate to Computer HKEYLOCALMACHINE SYSTEM CurrentControlSet Control Lsa In the right pane, right-click the 'LmCompatibilityLevel' key and select 'modify' Change the value from 3 to 1 Done Now to keep people from being pissed at me when they kill their system, I'm going to add this disclaimer: Make a backup of your registry before attempting this, and it wouldn't hurt to create a restore point either. Well I said I'd test the transferring vs XP. Here's what I found: Dealing with a 6.53GB single file, 100Mbps network.

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Time to push it from Vista to the 10.3.9 Box 17 Minutes 20 Seconds. Time to copy it from 10.3.9 to Vista 16 Minutes 58 Seconds, unstable transfer, approx every 10 seconds the speed would drop to 0, peaks were slightly above 77% network usage. Time to copy it from 10.3.9 to XP with Total Copy 1.2 15 Minutes 2 Seconds, visually it looked like 68% network usage fairly steady.

Time to copy it from 10.3.9 to XP with Windows copy 13 Minutes 49 Seconds, visually it looked like 72% network usage, also fairly steady.

The RTL8153-AD supports a persistent system specific MAC address. This means a device plugged into two different systems with host side support will show different (but persistent) MAC addresses. This information for the system's persistent MAC address is burned in when the system HW is built and available under SB.AMAC in the DSDT at runtime.

This technology is currently implemented in the Dell TB15 and WD15 Type-C docks. More information is available here: Signed-off-by: Mario Limonciello Signed-off-by: David S.

Mario D N A Rar For Mac