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Introducing, Installing, and Upgrading Windows 7

Introducing, Installing, and Upgrading Windows 7. Lesson 6. Objectives. File and Printer Sharing Basics. Basic sharing Advanced sharing Public folders HomeGroup Workgroups Domains. Network Locations in Windows 7. What Should You Use?.

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Introducing, Installing, and Upgrading Windows 7

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  1. Introducing, Installing, andUpgrading Windows 7 Lesson 6

  2. Objectives

  3. File and Printer Sharing Basics • Basic sharing • Advanced sharing • Public folders • HomeGroup • Workgroups • Domains

  4. Network Locations in Windows 7

  5. What Should You Use? • Use HomeGroup or Public folders if you have a small office/home office, all computers running Windows 7 • Use a workgroup if you have a peer-to-peer network that includes a mix of computers running Windows 7 and Windows Vista or Windows XP, and you want to share files between the computers • Use domains and Active Directory in larger business environments

  6. HomeGroup • The file and printer sharing solution built in to Window 7 • Once you set up a homegroup on one computer, other networked computers running Windows 7 can join the homegroup and automatically see the shared libraries and printers

  7. HomeGroup Caveats • Can only join (not create) a homegroup in Windows 7 Home Basic and Starter editions • Can join only one homegroup at a time; if computer is already joined to a homegroup, must leave that homegroup to join another • Can’t limit access to shared items to individual users; anyone using a computer that’s a member of the homegroup can access the shared content

  8. HomeGroup Caveats • Non-Windows 7 computers (Windows Vista, Windows XP, Mac OS, or Linux) require additional setup steps to access shared items in a homegroup • Must already have a network set up (either wired or wireless) • To create or join a homegroup, computer’s network location must be set to “Home network” (in the Network and Sharing Center)

  9. HomeGroup Setup

  10. HomeGroup Setup

  11. HomeGroup Setup

  12. HomeGroup Setup

  13. HomeGroup Setup

  14. Controlling HomeGroup Access

  15. Public Folders

  16. Public Folders • Public folder sharing in Windows 7 turned off by default (except on a homegroup) • When Public folder sharing is turned on, anyone on computer or network can access these folders • Can’t limit which files or folders are shared in a Public folder—everything is shared; anyone with network access can read and write files in Public folders

  17. Turning Public Folder Access On/Off

  18. Turning Public Folder Access On or Off

  19. Turning Password-Protected Sharing On or Off

  20. Basic and Advanced Shares • Allow you to control who may access specific files and folders located in your libraries • Advanced sharing offers the most options and is the best choice for protecting confidential information • File sharing and network discovery must be turned on • Best practice is to turn on password-protected sharing

  21. Setting Up a Basic Share

  22. Setting Up a Basic Share

  23. Setting Up a Basic Share

  24. Setting Up a Basic Share

  25. Setting Up an Advanced Share

  26. Setting Up an Advanced Share

  27. Setting Up an Advanced Share

  28. Setting Up an Advanced Share

  29. Setting Up an Advanced Share

  30. Drive Mapping • An easy way for users to get to a shared item • Mapped drive is a shortcut to a shared folder or drive on another computer across a network • In Windows 7, network drive letters start from Z: and work down • Select any drive letter that’s not already in use

  31. Drive Mapping

  32. Permissions • Rules applied to users and groups to limit actions they can take on shared resources

  33. Changing a Folder’s Permissions

  34. NTFS and Share Permissions • Share permissions • Apply to users who connect to a shared folder over a network • NTFS permissions • Apply to users who log on locally or from across a network

  35. The More Restrictive Permissions Apply • If you set share permissions and NTFS permissions on a shared folder, the more restrictive permissions apply to users who access the shared folder. • For example, you grant a user named Stacie the Read permission on a network share. However, her account has the Full Control NTFS permission on the same folder. Read is more restrictive, so Stacie has only Read access when connecting over the network.

  36. Inheritance

  37. Inheritance when Copying Files or Folders

  38. Inheritance when Moving Files or Folders within an NTFS Volume

  39. Inheritance when Moving Files or Folders from One NTFS Volume to Another

  40. Effective Permissions • Granted to a user or group based on the permissions granted through group membership and any permissions inherited from the parentobject

  41. Printer Sharing • Allows a computer user to share his or her attached printer with other users on a network. Use the Devices and Printers applet to manage and share printers. To share any printer, you must ensure that file and printer sharing is turned on in the Advanced sharing settings page (accessed from the Network and Sharing Center). • You have two primary ways to work with a printer: Device Stage and the Properties dialog box. Device Stage is a window that’s unique to each device in Devices and Printers. Just double-click a printer’s icon to open its Device Stage window. Demonstrate how to share an attached printer.

  42. Advanced Sharing Settings

  43. Devices and Printers

  44. Device Stage

  45. A Printer’s Properties Dialog Box

  46. The Sharing Tab

  47. The Advanced Tab

  48. Updating a Printer Driver

  49. Summary • Windows 7 networking methods include basic and advanced sharing, HomeGroup, Public folders, workgroups, and domains and Active Directory. • Using HomeGroup, you may share libraries and printers, but you don’t have a lot of control over which users may share the items. • Public folders are an easy way to share files with network users and between users on a computer. • Basic sharing and advanced sharing allow you to control who may access specific files and folders located in your libraries.

  50. Summary • Drive mapping allows you to create a shortcut to a shared folder across a network. • Permissions allow you to restrict the actions other users may take on shared items. • Windows 7 includes share and NTFS permissions. • Printer sharing allows a computer user to share an attached printer with other users on a network. • The Devices and Printers applet gives you access to utilities for viewing print driver information and updating drivers.

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