Question:
what are the default shares of operating system ?
shankar
2007-01-23 00:33:17 UTC
how can we acess the default shares of the system in network
Four answers:
2007-01-24 20:30:02 UTC
Start run in the run type the ip add res or the user name \\abc\c$ or d$ some there are the defaults share but some times this are disable in the services by default they are share
2016-05-24 04:10:58 UTC
There are advantages in having multi operating systems on a single hard drive. I used to have windows 98, and XP because I wanted to play games on one, and do serious stuff on the other. However, Win98 is not supported and it has difficulty with IE7 (won't run) so I put in two XP operating systems. The only reason for this is sometimes, you want to run game software but the act of uninstalling them can often make the OS very unstable. If you installed XP without overiding the existing one, then you have 2 operating systems but only one can boot at startup, there will be a black screen interface with option to boot one or the other. You can't access files and programs on the other OS if it has not booted. You should create a third partition if you meant to access the documents stored there, and accessed from either OS. If you run XP and saved in my documents, you won't be able to have access when running 2000 and the partition with the XP on it is hidden. You'll have less space left over on your hard drive because of 2 systems, plus residual files created. If you wish to share files, create a partition, and ensure that it is not NTFS, but FAT 32 as Windows 2000 may not see NTFS. You'll need a big hard drive, around120Gb upwards because you have to allow a separate partition to save your files. Use a third party software to manage partitioning such as Partition Magic (now under symantec). Having a third partition for data avoids the need to lose data stored in either OS partitions.
Neeraj Chaturvedi
2007-01-24 21:25:15 UTC
IPC$

Admin$

and for all the drives C$, D$ ......
ajaj_desai
2007-01-23 04:11:58 UTC
ipc$ , admin$, c$


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