Here’s a summary of the actions you can perform in this page: Use this file management interface to work with the files and folders in the share.
Icons for the Windows Home Server shared folders that are accessible toįigure 6. Select a sharedįolder, and you see the file management interface shown in Figure 6. View on the left and a contents view on the right. This displays a file interface for the available shares, with a tree When you log on to Remote Web Access, click Shared Folders.
Within each sharedįolder, you can create subfolders, rename and delete files, upload filesįrom your computer to the server, and download files from the server Shares and any nonuser shares that you’ve created.
Server’s shared folders via the Internet.
Windows Home Server, you can use Remote Web Access to work with the Working with Windows Home Server Shares in the Web Browserīesides connecting to Remote Desktop hosts and to If you connect to the Windows Home Server machine, you end up at the Dashboard, not the Windows Home Server desktop.Ħ. Ignore the error and continue loading the page.) Telling you that the website’s security certificate is invalid, you can Is the external IP address of your router. Launch Internet Explorer and enter https: //RouterIP (where RouterIP If you don’t have a subdomain, you need to use your router’s external IP address. , where subdomain is the subdomain you registered with Microsoft. Run Internet Explorer and enter the address https: //domain, where domain is the domain name you configured if you signed up for a subdomain, remember to use the address https: //subdomain. Log on to the Windows Home Server Dashboard,Ĭlick Server Settings, click the Remote Web Access tab, and then click If you configured a Windows Home Server domain, you have two choices: On to Windows Home Server’s Remote Web Access Home page. Displaying the Remote Web Access Home PageĪs with LAN connections through Windows Home Server,īefore you can connect to a computer via the Internet, you need to log Of the change and then locate and adjust the setting manually.4. If your computer is not joined, however, you will need to be aware Your computer will then apply that policy when it The security protocol, the domain can be configured to adjust theĪppropriate setting on every joined computer through a group For example, if certain resources accept only NTLMv2 as Thus, if a computer needs aĬertain configuration to function fully on the network, computersīelonging to the domain can receive that configurationĪutomatically. Resources, logging into that computer will also provide access to theĪnother benefit is that settings in a computer's operating system canīe changed or controlled by the network. On a Windows computer joined to the domain controlling those Network print queue, and the other computer) separately. Technology Center ( STC) and map a drive to anotherĬomputer, you'd normally have to log into each service (Exchange, the ForĮxample, if you use Outlook to access your ExchangeĪccount, and you want to access network printers in a Student With a single login, you can accessĭifferent services and resources without logging into each one. The principal benefit of joining a workstation to a domain is centralĪuthentication. edu addresses are called top-level domains, and Set of common addresses on the World Wide Web. Note: The term "domain" can also refer to a Indiana University's Activeĭirectory is an example of a domain. In other words, a domain is a controlled LAN that providesĪ single login for users to gain access to network resources like file That keeps track of users, their passwords, and what they're permitted
These servers (called controllers) refer to a database Information here may no longer be accurate, and links may no longer be available or reliable.Ī domain is a local area network ( LAN) with workstationsĪnd servers under the control of one central security server or group This content has been archived, and is no longer maintained by Indiana University.