ajpriest 0 Posted April 12, 2005 Hi all, Presently I have 5 pc's, all have logon accounts built in and range from 98, 2000 to XP SP1. I would like to setup a Win 2003 server that MS have kindly given me (as a student). I want to setup the server to control the access of users on my home network. Which ever machine I (or the kids) log onto, it will load a roaming profile. I did give it a try but it wanted a domain address like www.microsoft.com, this I do not have, I just want it on my internal private network. Can anyone assist before I try setting this up again? Regards, AJ Share this post Link to post
theefool 0 Posted April 13, 2005 You should be able to create a domain address and link it to your server. Don't quote me on this, since its been 5 years since I've done any of this. Anyway, that domain address can be anything, like homenetwork.com or something similar. I remember doing something like this back when I tested 2k advanced server back in 1999 or 2000. I also had to install DNS, for all this to work. Also, for your win98 boxes...check out: http://www.wellesley.edu/Computing/Domain/win98.html This link will describe how to get win98 to join your domain. Share this post Link to post
ajpriest 0 Posted April 13, 2005 Thanks, I shall try that. I also found a couple of tutorials at: http://www.petri.co.il/install_windows_2003.htm http://www.visualwin.com/ and finally, although it's for 2000, I'm hoping it will be similar for 2003: http://www.activewin.com/win2000/step_by_step/infrastructure/serversteps1.shtml These seem to backup what you have said. I tried doing this before but it said something along the lines of the domain not being accessable. Hopefully this time!! I will keep you posted. Regards, AJ Share this post Link to post
peterh 1 Posted April 13, 2005 BTW, Windows 9x machines cannot 'join' a domain as such but can authenticate against a domain and access resources. Roaming profiles will not work either. A small warning, roaming profiles may stop working if trying to logon to different machines with different OSs due to differences in registry layouts. Share this post Link to post