Thanks, Brian, I'll bet that will do it.  And thanks, John for letting me
know that - I hadn't done a thing with Vista so fell out of the loop a bit.

 

David

 

From: Brian Desmond [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, October 31, 2009 11:31 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Windows 7 firewall

 

I committed this one to memory - it turns the firewall off on Vista or Win7
in a manner that gets the OP what he wants (free flowing traffic):

 

netsh advfirewall set allprofiles state=off

 

Thanks,

Brian Desmond

[email protected]

 

c - 312.731.3132

 

From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, October 31, 2009 11:16 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Windows 7 firewall

 

That's how it's supposed to work-it's a defensive mechanism. The OS assumes
that if the firewall service is stopped, something must be wrong. It shuts
down networking because of this.

 

There are other ways to turn the firewall off, though:

 

http://blogs.technet.com/networking/archive/2009/03/24/stopping-the-windows-
authenticating-firewall-service-and-the-boot-time-policy.aspx

 

 

 

 

John Hornbuckle

MIS Department

Taylor County School District

www.taylor.k12.fl.us

 

 

 

From: David Florea [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, October 31, 2009 12:02 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Windows 7 firewall

 

 We use ACT on our network.  We've always had to disable the XP firewall in
order for ACT to work in a networked environment; no biggie because the
local firewall wasn't used anyway.  Now with a Windows 7 machine on the
domain, I have a drive mapped to it from an XP workstation.  To my surprise,
if I actually disable or stop the firewall service on the Win7 PC, it kills
drives which are mapped to it from an XP workstation.  I tried it several
times, worked the same way each time.  I can't find anything definitive
about it - anyone know why that would be so?

Thanks,

David 

 

 

 

 
 
 
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