To answer your question succinctly, permissions apply to users only not
machines.  If you're in a workgroup, and you create a share on the W2K box
with Everyone having permission, then literally everyone has permission, and
your administration is done.

William J. Robbins, MCSE+I, CNN, CCNA, CCDA, VSM

-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Pilbeam [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Wednesday, September 26, 2001 12:23
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: W2K pro in a work group

Hi folks,
Excuse my ignorance, and unfortunately I can't test this.
How does W2K work in a workgroup.
For example.
In Windows 98 once the workgroup is configured on a computer, anyone who
logs on to the workgroup using that computer is able to access the
resources.
Is this true for W2K pro.
The scenario I am envisaging is this.
I join a computer to a workgroup using the Administrator account.
Now W2K pro has far better security and each user has or can have their own
profiles, permissions etc.
If, having been added to a workgroup using the Administrator account, I log
on as a user, provided the folders on a remote computer, also part of the
same workgroup, are share to the Everyone group, would this new user be able
to access those resources without any further administration?
Or would I have to add the computer to the work group for each user that
logged on to the computer?
Thanks
mark


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