This article is from a FAQ concerning SCO operating
systems. While some of the information may be applicable to any OS,
or any Unix or Linux OS, it may be specific to SCO Xenix, Open
Desktop or Openserver.
There is lots of Linux, Mac OS X and general Unix info elsewhere on
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Because that's the way Microsoft wants it to work.
First, if all you want to do is ACCESS the shares, you can, even though they don't pop up in Network neighborhood. You'll need a \WINDOWS\LMHOSTS file, and all it needs in it is something like this:
10.1.36.5 mysmbserver #PRE
For NT, it's "\WINNT\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\ETC\LMHOSTS" (assuming your system is in \WINNT)
The "#PRE" is not a comment, it needs to be there. With this in place (and you probably need to reboot), you can do Start->Run, type \\mysmbserver and, all other things being equal, it will pop up.But if you want to browse across sub-nets, you need more. Microsoft wants you to put in an NT server on the subnet's LAN; you can do it with a Unix/Linux machine running Samba and get the same benefit.
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