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None of them seems to apply to my situation.
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Did you try the strategy from one of the Microsoft links which suggests the following to see the information about NetBIOS?
To determine whether NBT is enabled on a Windows-based computer, run a net config redirector or net config server command at a command prompt. The output shows bindings for the NetbiosSmb device (which is the "NetBIOS-less" transport) and for the NetBT_Tcpip device (which is the NBT transport). For example, the following sample output shows both the direct-hosted and the NBT transport bound to the adapter: Workstation active on
NetbiosSmb (000000000000)
NetBT_Tcpip_{610E2A3A-16C7-4E66-A11D-A483A5468C10} (02004C4F4F50)
NetBT_Tcpip_{CAF8956D-99FB-46E3-B04B-D4BB1AE93982} (009027CED4C2)
NetBT_Tcpip is bound to each adapter individually; an instance of NetBT_Tcpip is shown for each network adapter that it is bound to. NetbiosSmb is a global device and is not bound on a per-adapter basis. This means that direct-hosted SMBs cannot be disabled in Windows without completely disabling File and Printer Sharing for Microsoft Networks.
Are you familiar with Browse Master settings?
Also, do you have at least one of the computers configured to assume a MASTER BROWSER role? See the following link.
http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;188001
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You may be able to use the tip in the following link to locate the name of the file responsible for generating that message.
http://discussions.virtualdr.com/sho...d.php?t=198604
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Dude, this thread is a year old!
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Haven't got the time to try that yet, Robert, being the holidays and all. Will do later and let you know.
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Are you logging onto the client computers when you start them up?
What user name are you using? Do you have user profiles in use on the clients? Same user name being used as when writing to the root worked before?