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Forum Discussion
Boomer48
Sep 17, 2018Aspirant
Readyshare access fails on wi-fi
I just picked up a never used R6700v2 and plugged in a Sandisk flash drive. I can access the drive when connected to ethernet but not when connected to wi-fi (same computer). WIN10 says it can't fi...
- Sep 19, 2018
Turns out the problem was more generic in nature because I was not able to log into the router itself. Once I realized that, it became a simple fix. The laptop was connecting via the guest network which, of course, does not have the net sharing box checked. Changed the connection to the primary SSID and all is well. This router replaced a DD-WRT based one so the difference in guest networks wasn't on my radar.
antinode
Sep 17, 2018Guru
> [...] I can access the drive when connected to ethernet but not when
> connected to wi-fi (same computer). [...]
Same computer, but Windows may see those as two different network
connections. Are both "Private"? (File sharing on a "Public" network
may be restricted.)
> [...] I upgraded the router firmware [...]
To what? (Hint: An actual version number would be more useful than
your opinion of what's "the latest" today.)
- Boomer48Sep 17, 2018Aspirant
None of the computers on my local network have file sharing enabled. All can access the NAS via ethernet. The wi-fi is a local connection (i.e.: I am not trying to access the NAS via a web browser).
- antinodeSep 18, 2018Guru
> None of the computers on my local network have file sharing enabled.
> [...]
Not even as a client? What does "access the drive" mean to you, if
it doesn't involve file sharing (as a client)?
> [...] All can access the NAS via ethernet. [...]
What, exactly, does "access" mean to you? "access" how? Web
browser? File Explorer? FTP client? ...? And how does Windows
describe those Ethernet network connections, "Private" or "Public"?
> [...] The wi-fi is a local connection (i.e.: I am not trying to access
> the NAS via a web browser).
You lost me. Until now, did I say anything about a web browser? Are
the Ethernet connections somehow _not_ "local"? - schumakuSep 18, 2018Guru - Experienced User
Boomer48 wrote:To gain NetBIOS discovery and name resolution on Windows 10 180x ff. CIFS/SMB 1.0 Client and Server must be enabled - just in case.
Boomer48 wrote:
The Client for Windows Networking is enabled on the WiFi interface?
A little bit unclear for the finding the potential problem is that you don't tell us how you access it on the Ethernet. Is the ReadyShare becoming visible on Windows Explorer - Network? Dou you access it as \\readyshare (or an alternate name configured)? Do you access it only by IP, like \\192.168.1.1\ ?- Boomer48Sep 19, 2018Aspirant
Turns out the problem was more generic in nature because I was not able to log into the router itself. Once I realized that, it became a simple fix. The laptop was connecting via the guest network which, of course, does not have the net sharing box checked. Changed the connection to the primary SSID and all is well. This router replaced a DD-WRT based one so the difference in guest networks wasn't on my radar.