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Can XP Home work with old computers?

Discussion in 'Windows XP' started by Roger at CCCC, 2003/05/22.

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  1. 2003/05/22
    Roger at CCCC

    Roger at CCCC Inactive Thread Starter

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    I've got a relatively new Dell computer with Win XP Home, and also several old Pentiums and 486's, all in a 3 person office of a small non-profit organization. Is there any way to enable these old computers to simply serve as dumb terminals from my XP Home machine, leaving programs and data to run on the XP Home machine? There are several users of the XP Home machine, all of whom have profiles on the XP Home machine, but it's obviously inconvenient when more than one person wants to use it at once. Thanks for any response.
     
  2. 2003/05/22
    reboot

    reboot Inactive

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    Not exactly dumb terminals, they will need an OS installed, and networked, but you can host some apps on the fast machine, and run them via the network, as long as drives/folders are mapped.
     

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  4. 2003/05/22
    Roger at CCCC

    Roger at CCCC Inactive Thread Starter

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    Thanks for your response, "reboot ". Is the "hosting" that you speak of a standard feature of Windows networking? I haven't done any networking before. If so, can you give me some hints of where to start learning about it. And how can I tell which applications (Microsoft Office apps?) can in fact be hosted in this way? Thanks again.
     
  5. 2003/05/22
    PeteC

    PeteC SuperGeek Staff

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    Roger,

    Also note the MS quoted minima for XP Pro (Home similar I guess):

    300 MHz (233 MHz minimum) Pentium/Celeron or AMD K6/Athlon/Duron

    128 Mb RAM or > , 64Mb min supported, but may limit performance (you bet !!) and some features (like it may not work at all !!)

    1.5 Gb of disk space.
     
  6. 2003/05/22
    PeteC

    PeteC SuperGeek Staff

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    On second thoughts I guess I've missed the point here - the old PC's all have OS's ?

    Take a look in Help and Support - Networking

    I networked my laptop and PC together very simply using the Network Wizard - just needed a NIC card for the PC and a CAT cable to join the two. Not sure what the minimum OS is for the non XP computers, but I guess the articles will enlighten you on that point.
     
  7. 2003/05/22
    reboot

    reboot Inactive

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    OK, more detail:
    The fast computer running XP has multiple drives/partitions, all shared openly on the network.
    Each other computer has an OS (at least 95b and up).
    Each computer wants to run programs, but the memory, and/or hard drive space may be limited.
    Let's say you have a partition on the host for each client.
    Open Explorer on each client, expand the Network neighborhood tree, and find it's partition on the host. Right click, and Map the drive/partition.
    Now the client can install software on it's partition (hosted on the host), and run the software from there. This even allows Win9x to run NTFS hosted software. Basically, you're sharing the load of running the program between the host and the client. You could go as far as allowing the temp, and swap files of the clients to reside on the host, or even use part of it's RAM as a ramdrive for the client(s).
    Anything that starts with Windows may give errors, if the host is not ON when the client is started, but as long as host is always on, then each client could access it's partition on the host, and you could even set up a mutual share for all clients, as well as peer to peer sharing of any other folders/drives on any/all of the computers on the LAN.
    A small router, a few cables, and NetBEUI protocall would be ideal for this.
     
    Last edited: 2003/05/22
  8. 2003/05/23
    Roger at CCCC

    Roger at CCCC Inactive Thread Starter

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    Thanks so much, PeteC and reboot. You've given me lots of information to get started. One final question: What is a "CAT cable "? Thanks again.
     
  9. 2003/05/23
    PeteC

    PeteC SuperGeek Staff

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    Roger,

    A CAT cable is used to connect 2 NIC's (Network Interface Cards) - there are other types of network cables, but this is where my knowledge of the subject greys out!

    For lots of useful info do a search in All Open Forums on this board for 'CAT cable' - without the quotes.
     
  10. 2003/05/24
    reboot

    reboot Inactive

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    CAT 5 is the most common cable for networking.
    CAT 6 is used for longer runs (over about 50 '), and is quite a bit more expensive.
     
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