Small Office Network Setup

Hello everyone! Pretty soon I will be starting a graphic design, video, and music production company with my brother and friend. All 3 sections will be using apple macs. I was just wondering if any of you can offer suggestions as far as networking hardware and software. Or any how-to-guides. I believe we will be using 7 plus macs and will need room for expansion. Also looking into getting the Xserve. Thanks for all your help!

I am no networking expert but I will tell you what we use for a 7-mac network.
Router: Linksys RV0041
Switch: Linksys Etherfast 3124 24-port switch (EF3124)
These work fine managing network traffic and have good enough throughput for our use. The router gives the network firewall protection but still allows access from the internet for one Mac we use as a web server and mail server.
Be sure you design backup into your network. You might consider using one Mac to run full time just to manage backup using Retrospect. Also make sure your rotate your backed-up files off-site periodically (for example to a safe deposit box). This means having at least two good-size external hard drives. Your whole new business will be on this network and you have to have not only an onsite backup for quick restore but also an offsite version in case your place burns down. This may sound extreme --but your new business will be out of business without secure backup.
G5 Dual 2.0   Mac OS X (10.4.4)  
G5 Dual 2.0   Mac OS X (10.4.3)  

Similar Messages

  • Small Office Network Setup Help

    Hi folks,
    We are renting a small office in a floor which consists of many offices. The way internet is distributed here is, they have a verizon fios router and a couple of unmanaged switch, from which cables are run to offices for internet. One of the port on a switch is dedicated to our office.
    In our office we have 6 computers and a network printer. The computers need to share files with each other and be able to print.
    We want to isolate our office network from others. When we use an unmanaged switch, the version router dhcp assigns ip addresses to computers and we are able to access the internet. The verizon local ip is: 192.168.1.xxx. But we can also see computers that are of other offices, which means they can see us.
    How do we create a separate network? Say we want to use  IP 192.168.10.XXX or 10.0.0.xxx. We just bought a 24 port managed (L2) switch.
    Thanks

    Hello, rjbm_exact. 
    You definitely need a managed switch and a Cisco Small Business (200 or 300 series) can meet your requirements. You can setup separate VLAN to segregate user access level. Are you also looking at expanding your wireless (guest access)?
    Let me know if you need more assistance or e-mail ([email protected]) me directly. Kind regards. 

  • Newb needs help w small office network setup

    Just started a new job at small start-up company that needs their 6-7 macs and a couple of printers networked. I'm just a designer and I'm trying to help but I'm not familiar with osX networking and I hope someone could point me in the right direction. Currently the owner has DSL on all the computers so there is an ethernet cable in each one to a router or hub i believe.
    Currently when I try to connect via Go menu to Connect to server, there is no list. If I type in the name of one of the other computers and try to connect I get:
    "Connection failed. The server may not exist of it is not operational at this time. Check the server name or IP address and try again."
    I don't really know where to start or what questions to ask but I hope having an ethernet cable system already in place is a good thing.
    Your help appreciated

    I'm starting out with 2 computers near me, G4 HOMER
    and G4 MINI. Both are connecting to the net via
    ethernet. Personal File Sharing is ON on both.
    On G4 MINI, I can see G4 HOMER, but when trying to
    connect (Go>Connect to server>G4 HOMER) get
    "ConnectionFailed -Server may not exist or is not
    operational"
    when connecting ot the server try using G4-HOMER.local as the server address.

  • How to setup a small office network

    Hello,
    I am looking to setup a small office network comprising 6 G4 macs (existing computers) that have been upgraded to the newest OS version. What is the best way to go about networking these computers together in terms of being able to share files, internet connection, access to peripherals and also implementing a firewall.
    Any suggestions or help would be greatly appreciated.
    Thank you

    1, Get a cable internet ISP account; depending on your service you should be able to secure a 5Mbps down and 2Mbps up on the cable e.g. Cox or Comcast.
    2. Get a good router. The mass market Linksys and Netgear routers aren't very good in terms of reliability. I use a ZyXEL P-330W router is the best I've ever seen. Its reliable and very efficient in terms of throughout. The Apple Airport Extreme is good.
    3. Set up the router to support UPnP. This way all computers will be able to share iChatAV video conferencing. If you enabled "port forwarding" only one Mac would be able to use iChatAV video conferencing.
    4. Set up your router for DHCP to dynamically issue Internet address to all your computers.
    5. Setup the wireless router for encryption such as WPA. This will encrypt wireless communication.
    6. Setup the wireless router for only your computers. You'll have to get the MAC/AirPort ID network addresses as expressed in terms of an xx:xx:xx:xx address. You can get this thru your Systems Preferences -> Network window -> AirPort (in the sidebar) -> Advanced button.
    7. If you have Ethernet in your office then skip steps 5 and 6 above.
    8. On each computer open up the System Preferences -> Sharing and check-off the File Sharing. Set your user access preferences appropriately.
    9. Get a Network enabled All-in-one printer and setup Printer Sharing options. Hook-it up to your network and add your printer by clicking on the "+" sign in your "Print and Fax" Preferences.
    10. Don't enable Apple Firewall on each Mac. The router will be the Firewall.
    Ok. That's the short-hand.. plug it all in and go!

  • Randomly monitor small office network

    Looking for a user-friendly, dummy-proof article on creating a small office network from a total of four Mac's (3 iMacs, one Air), allowing the administrator to randomly monitor without detection the real-time activities taking place on the other two machines. Triple points for iOS monitoring capabilities, as well

    Hello, rjbm_exact. 
    You definitely need a managed switch and a Cisco Small Business (200 or 300 series) can meet your requirements. You can setup separate VLAN to segregate user access level. Are you also looking at expanding your wireless (guest access)?
    Let me know if you need more assistance or e-mail ([email protected]) me directly. Kind regards. 

  • Best practices for setting up users on a small office network?

    Hello,
    I am setting up a small office and am wondering what the best practices/steps are to setup/manage the admin, user logins and sharing privileges for the below setup:
    Users: 5 users on new iMacs (x3) and upgraded G4s (x2)
    Video Editing Suite: Want to connect a new iMac and a Mac Pro, on an open login (multiple users)
    All machines are to be able to connect to the network, peripherals and external hard drive. Also, I would like to setup drop boxes as well to easily share files between the computers (I was thinking of using the external harddrive for this).
    Thank you,

    Hi,
    Thanks for your posting.
    When you install AD DS in the hub or staging site, disconnect the installed domain controller, and then ship the computer to the remote site, you are disconnecting a viable domain controller from the replication topology.
    For more and detail information, please refer to:
    Best Practices for Adding Domain Controllers in Remote Sites
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc794962(v=ws.10).aspx
    Regards.
    Vivian Wang

  • Small office network questions

    I have a small office with 4-5 mac computers. I have a Mac mini set up as a file server and I use a standard cable connection for my internet service. I use a wired router (ethernet cables) all going to a netgear switch.
    Just bought a mac mini and a drobo storage device. I have successfully set up the drobo on the mac mini and I can "see" the files and read & write to the external drive. I also have a few other people in the office -- which will need access to the drobo via the network, but have a few questions there:
    1. I don't see the name of the other computers that can connect to the unit. When I get on one of the other machines and look for the drobo I can find it & edit files but from the mac-mini side, I can't see the proper name of the other computer. How do I do this?
    2. Can I limit which folders are accessible within the drobo that attached to the mac mini
    3. Am I missing anything from a safety standpoint? Can Anyone come into my office and access the files that are on the mac/mini drobo? Worse off, is the mac mini vulnerable to the outside world with this setup?
    Thanks for the help, new to all this networking stuff.

    It's been a week, so i don't know if you have already worked this out, but...
    while I am not familiar with your router, when I have used linksys before, i find it better to use static IP addresses for everything.  Try setting static IP addresses and make sure everyone's mask is 255.255.255.0.  Some routers also have a flag to allow computers to see each other.
    Best of luck.

  • Problem using File sharing  in a small office network

    I have a problem using File sharing on an Imac and Macbook Pro.
    My office has a small network running Windows Small office file server 2003. I have one Windows 2000 PC connected to it and 3 Macs, an 2.4 gHz Intel iMac running Leopard 10.5.6 , a MBP running the same and a Mac Mini running 10.5.
    From the Finder Shared window of the Mac Mini, I can see all the computers on the network. It also used to be the case for the iMac, but the MBP could never see the Windows PC’s, not the server or the Win2000. This wasn’t a big problem as I was communicating between the Macs and using the shared printer on the iMac.
    On Monday Jan 19 the iMac was suddenly unavailable to the other 2 Macs. It was working normally on the Friday. The iMac can access the Mac Mini and copy files to it. The Mac Mini can see the iMac but cannot access it. Even trying to connect as, ends in a failed connection. I have tried rebooting, turning File sharing off and then on again to no avail.
    The iMac now also cannot see the Windows PC’s which it previously could.
    To get files from the MBP for printing, I now copy it to the Mac Mini and acces the folder from the iMac, a very tedious procedure. I don’t know why this happened and am scared that the Mac Mini is going to do the same thing.
    All three computers are also running VMware 2.0 with Windows XP pro, and from VMware the server is visible on all the computers.
    Any help will be much appreciated, I live in a small town in South Africa and the local computer suppliers have no knowledge of the Macs.
    I think that the problem with the iMac may have started after a software upgrade to 10.5.6 but I am not entirely sure.
    Thank you
    ajdk

    Well, you're current method sounds pretty good. But if you want to user a file server, hey go ahead.
    What you want to do when you centralize project files is to keep track of which one is the newest and becareful not to overwrite files with the same name. So you either have to set up individual spaces on the server (separate AFP/FTP folders maybe), or you'll need to run a file checkout service.
    The individual space is cheaper, but it's not much of a difference from backing up to the network drive. Since you have Gigabit connections, you might even opt to save ALL the user files on the server instead of just the project files.
    If you want to run a file checkout service, there's two approaches. You can run a service that can host any kind of file, or you can run a version control system for each kind of application (Photoshop, Word, etc.). Please notice, that as you read further and further along, the methods become more and more expensive and complicated. Once you get to this point, it will be necessary to purchase or build software in addition to the Mac OS X Server package.

  • Setting up a small office network - advice needed

    We are to move our small office (3 people) from a shared office environment to our own office space. That has the huge advantage that we´ll finally be Mac-only, but the agreeable disadvantage that there is no longer a networking professional around. And this is where I enter. I now have to find a solution on how to set up the network, and I do not have experience in that field (though I am fairly experienced with OSX).
    As of today we have a G5 iMac, a G4 powermac and a G4 iBook. In the not too far future we will be getting a proper G5 powermac as well.
    The G4 is used for low key office applications, Word and Mail mostly. The iMac is the workhorse that runs all graphic/video applications. It also is used for presentations once in a while, so that this machine is not always available. The iBook is used for writing and e-mail plus some light-weight field editing.
    I would like to find a solution that we could store all important files on one computer, so that it would be easier to make regular back-ups. And everyone could easily access those files.
    It would be great if data from iCal and Adress Book could also be stored centrally, such as that addresses are available for everyone, and updated calenders are available for all employees.
    As the budget should be as small as possible, I was wondering if we could use the G4 powerbook (867mhz, 1gig memory) to run a sharing service in the background. Then I could also install a second harddisk and use both hdd as a backing-up-raid. Once in a while I would make a backup on a external firewire disk.
    Is this a possible solution, or should we rather have one machine dedicated as a server. Would it be sufficient then to use the G4 as that server and buy a MacMini or iMac as the office machine?
    Since it is a small network, would I still need an OSX server license, or is the standard OSX enough for this?
    iMac G5 20, G4 QS 867mhz, iBook G4, PB 190, and a Pentium that I haven't switched on in months...   Mac OS X (10.4.3)   Experienced with technology, just not with networking...

    There are two ways to set up a network:
    1 peer-to-peer
    2 client-server
    Peer-to-peer is cheaper, but not reliable. Apple supports peer-to-peer in OS X. (In fact, in all versions of the Mac OS since System 7.) You can have up to 10 users connected to any one machine using peer-to-peer. (Warning... if you have more than five users, that machine is going to get slow.) The various peers are used as normal workstations while sharing. You have three peers, and may get one or two more, so you can use peer-to-peer. Just don't overdo it. Your planed usage of a few Word docs and a few graphics files sounds about right.
    Under OS X the peers are limited to sharing specific folders only, unless they use 3rd-party software such as SharePoint, which allows the sharing of any and all folders.
    It seems that you plan to use the G4 as a 'server' using peer-to-peer. You also seem to be planing to add additional drives, and RAID. I'd get a high end IDE PCI card, or a FireWire card, or a SCSI card, for the G4. Depending on which G4 you have, you can stick up to four hard drives in the case if you go IDE or internal FireWire or SCSI. External SCSI or FireWire drive configuratins are limited only by the drive slots available (7 for low-end SCSI, 15 for high-end SCSI, 63 for FireWIre) and the space available. (And, of course, the budget availanle...) You can get dedicated RAID controllers.
    For backup I'd get DVD or tape. Tape holds more and is easier to use, but is expensive (you have no idea how expensive, but I suspect you'll find out) and can be finicky. DVD is a lot cheaper, but it's slow, and someone will have to sit and feed discs into the machine. This will get old really fast. If your backup requirements are modest, DVDs might do, but probably you'll need something else. You could just buy an external hard disk and back up to that...
    Apple charges US$500 for OS X Server 10 seat version. (They charge $1000 for the 255-seat version.) OS X Server should run on the G4, and will turn it into a full-fledged server.
    Any of the O'Reilly books on OS X Server and/or on Samba should help you get started. O'Reilly's _Using Samba_ has a section devoted specifically to SMB on OS X Server which should be quite helpful.

  • Computers on small office network - names getting confused on iChat

    We are using bonjour and iChat on the computers on a small airport network in our office as an instant messaging solution in our office - however, 2 of the computers (which are named differently) keep getting confused and both being called the same name.
    I have done the fix where you go to System Prefs, Users & Groups and then set the address book card to that particular computer owner, restart the computer and then open iChat (using bonjour) - it saves the name but then my colleague becomes the same name as me on iChat - so we do the same thing to her computer (set address book card etc) and it changes her iChat name, but then also seems to override what I had set for mine previously.
    Help!! What can I do to stop these 2 computers seemingly overriding each other? It doesn't happen with the other 4 computers sharing our network...

    Hi,
    In System Preferences > Sharing is the Name the Computer has.
    This does play a part in any Bonjour Connection.
    It is this name that appears in Shares in the Finders's Side bar.
    Separate for that iChat and Messages that have the Bonjour Account Enabled broadcast the details from the My Card in the Address Book.
    Issues can arise with some Server based Logins that create a Global Address book that changes the My Card.
    You get similar difficulties on some DiskImage roll outs of updates and the like if the details of the Address Book are copied as well.
    I am not sure what you mean by the "fix" in System Preferences > Users and Groups to change the My Card or the Computer's Name.
    Yes you can click the Contact Card for that account and it will show you it in the Address Book and it should be th My Card.
    Changing the My Card then does not alter which Card is associated with the Mac User Account.
    There is no access to the Computer's Name
    7:53 PM      Wednesday; August 1, 2012
    Please, if posting Logs, do not post any Log info after the line "Binary Images for iChat"
      iMac 2.5Ghz 5i 2011 (Lion 10.7.2)
     G4/1GhzDual MDD (Leopard 10.5.8)
     MacBookPro 2Gb (Snow Leopard 10.6.8)
     Mac OS X (10.6.8),
    "Limit the Logs to the Bits above Binary Images."  No, Seriously

  • Home Office Network Setup

    Sorry in advance. Just spent the better part of the weekend trying to find related post/replies...and just got woefully confused.
    I do architectural graphics and work primarily on a mac for PShop, Illustrator, InDesign, and Sketchup. I also use a PC to work in AutoCAD. Trying to update my OSes (major backup needed, hence the external drive)AND streamline my workflow.
    Currently, I use sneakernet/flashdrive to share graphics files between the two platforms. This is getting old. Was told I could share an external hard drive between the two. Bought one without researching HOW-TO first. My bad. Before integrating the hard drive, would like to create a home-office network. (hard drive not connected yet)
    Here's what I have:
    imac G4 17-inch, OS X 10.4.11, NO airport extreme card installed
    Dell Latitude D610 notebook, Windows XP, sp1 (I know, updating after success here)
    My Book External Hard Drive (non-portable, TO BE usb-connected to imac)
    ABS Snow
    A few pre-bluetooth printers
    *Current set up*, archaic, but works fine:
    Cable modem> ethernet> ABS (WAN port)
    ABS (LAN port)>ethernet> imac g4
    Windows wireless to ABS
    Printer > usb > imac
    What I want to do:
    1) Print wirelessly from pc.
    2) Access my mac-stored graphic files from pc.
    3) Share external drive with mac and pc without having to do the sneaker-flash drive dance. I intend on connecting directly from mac via usb.
    4) Read/write SHARED files to/from said external drive with either mac or pc.
    5) Use external drive for backups, mac and pc.
    6) Share iTunes library between pc and mac.
    Money's my biggest limitation, or I'd just go buy a newer extreme w/ usb ports, etc. After trying to piecemeal the 5000 related posts I've read, I officially have no idea where to start.
    I THINK I understand how to share files/folders between the two (http://www.ifelix.net/tech/3020.html) With my current setup, can I simply use file sharing in a similar way to connect PC to external hard drive? printer?
    I THINK I will be moving my mac documents/graphic files/music to the external hard drive. I THINK I will chose the moved folders on this _external hard drive_ that I want to pc-share. I THINK the mac-pc compatible external drive will allow equal read/write access. I THINK it's going to be THIS easy.
    BUT...does the Snow have the capacity to support my intended network (internet, external drive, printer)? Or will the mac need an airport extreme card to make this work?
    Also, any thoughts on partitioning the external drive? I've read some posts elsewhere with that recommendation. It seems like a potential headache since I'll be sharing things like music and graphic files.
    I have some serious backing up and general hd cleanup to do but am petrified to lose everything in my attempt to share this external disk. Help! Mega-many thank you's if you made it this far in the post!

    Does the mac need to be wireless in order to utilize file sharing or 'Connect to Server' commands?
    No. You can do both via an Ethernet connection. A matter of fact, file sharing will be demonstrably faster with Ethernet as compared to wireless.
    Do I need programs like DAVE and/or SAMBA to make all this wireless talk happen?
    Neither. These have nothing to do with wireless connectivity. When sharing files between Macs, you will utilize AFP which is built-in OS X. Sharing with Windows/Linux clients will require SMB. This too is available from OS X.
    It sounds like, by your post, that the pc will only network with peripherals directly connected to the router (snow) and NOT to peripherals connected to the mac, which is wired to the snow. Is that correct?
    Sorry, if I mislead you. That is not true. A PC can access either devices connected wired/wirelessly to the Snow or to devices connected to a Mac that is sharing them.
    Let me know if the AFP link I provided doesn't answer all your questions. You may also find the following iFelix link handy: Sharing files between a Windows XP PC and a Mac running OS 10.4.x

  • Home/Office network setup (Mini Lan Network) if possible?

    Hi,
    To all the people that know what the best way to set up a home to office network such as the diagram below, please help us out with the following questions:
    I hope that someone can understand the diagram. Anyways,
    We currently have both setups, but there is no network communication either through Home nor Office where a PC will talk to a Mac or vic versa, nor through connecting through the internet where our office machines will talk to the home machines and vices versa. This is where my requirements for such a setup is needed.
    Our Office uses the iMac for general Administration/Accounting work, whilst the PC is used for Engineering Draft work and others. The home machines; the PC again is used for Engineering work and others whilst the Mac is a general Purpose machine used by most members of the house hold.
    Basically speaking, we would like to somehow link all peripherals and machines in such a way that:
    - The home machines can talk to each other and their respective connected devices as well as the Office machines and their respective devices.
    - The Office machines can talk to each other and their respective connected devices as well as the Home machines and their respective devices.
    Currently the setup is as follows:
    Home: PC : Has one main user for doing Engineering work and General other purpose activities.
    MAC : Has multiple Accounts for doing general work
    Office: PC : Has one main user for doing Engineering work and General other purpose activities.
    MAC : Has 3 accounts; One for main Admin user and the other two only to access MYOB accounting and shared folders.
    If I can get a point listing of how to achieve all this, I would be very grateful. Also, due to software licensing imposed by S/W companies what would be the best way to reduce the number of software bought for each computer only to be run from one main machine... similar to how program linking worked in Mac OS 9.2.2. I would like to do this through Virtaul PC running off the iMac and say running Microsoft Office from the P3. I currently have MS remote Desktop connection but this logs out the user that would otherwise been logged on when I hook up to the PC, is there another way?
    I hope to get lots of feed back for this one guys.
    Thanks
    Tibs
    <pre>
    Home/Office Network Diagram:
    PC (P4/2GHz Win 2000 Professional) Mac ( Dual Boot Dual 1.25GHz G4/ Tiger 10.4.9)
    - Microsoft Office - General Software
    - Engineering Software
    | |
    | |
    | |
    ---------------------- SWITCH (100MBps) -------------------------
    |
    |
    |
    ADSL/CABLE Modem
    |
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- HOME
    |
    INTERNET
    |
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- OFFICE
    |
    ADSL/CABLE Modem
    |
    |
    |
    ---------------------- SWITCH (100MBps) -------------------------
    | |
    | |
    | |
    PC (P3 800MHz/ Win 2000 Professional) iMac ( 1GHz G4/ Tiger 10.4.9)----------------------------- USB HUB ----------------------
    - Engineering Software - MYOB Account Edge Version 6 | | |
    - Microsoft Office - Virtual PC 6.1.1 | | |
    | - Apple Works 6.2.4 | | |
    | Epson Scanner Lexmark BW Laser Brother Fax
    | |
    |
    ---------------------------------- |--- FW 400 Ext. HD 80GB
    | |
    | |
    HP A0 EPSON COLOUR
    (NETWORK PLOTTER/PRINTER) (NETWORK LASER PRINTER)
    </pre>
    PPC MDD Dual Boot/Dual 1.25GHz   Mac OS 9.2.x   2 x 23" Apple HD Display, 2GB RAM, 2x150GB + 1x1TB HD
    PPC MDD Dual Boot/Dual 1.25GHz   Mac OS 9.2.x   2 x 23" Apple HD Display, 2GB RAM, 2x150GB + 1x1TB HD

    You should study VNC.
    You will need to configure the router at work, to accept and forward VNC connections. (open port 5900, forward to computer#1's IP address. open port 5901, forward to computer#2's IP address...see below)
    You will need to set up work computers to be running as VNC servers.
    Work computers should also be configured to have static IP inside the LAN. Your router will need a fixed IP address to forward VNC traffic into.
    standard listening port for VNC is 5900 (i think), and each VNC server can be set to listen on different port. (5900,5901,etc)
    You will need to configure home computers to be VNC client.
    On home computer, in order to connect to work computer #1, run VNC client to connect to Work Public IP address (WAN router address) on port 5905(or whatever standard VNC port is). Work router will forward that hit on VNC port, into work computer#1.
    More FAQ here:
    http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&safe=off&q=vnc+faq&btnG=Search

  • Using Time Capsule to backup a small office network

    Hi all,
    I am hoping somebody may be able to tell me if this is a good plan or not. I have been really struggling to find a good network backup solution. I've been trying to make a Lacie Ethernet Disc Mini work but have finally given up on that one.
    I am trying to find a simple solution to backup a network of 5 macs. 1 is currently plugged straight into my router, another router port extends to switch in another building which has 4 further macs along with other network devices connected. Crucially, there is no wireless access from this building to the router.
    Would all macs backup to the Time Capsule, including those that are wired via the switch? If so, at what speed? I have heard suggestions that it can be a very slow process?
    I'm not worried about any kind of streaming - purely a good backup device.
    All advice very gratefully received,
    Regards
    Richard

    Hi Richard,
    I have a small business and chose to use Time Capsule as a backup for my company's network. We have 12 workstations and use all Macs, some wireless and some not. I'm an experienced Mac sys admin and have setup many networks, including designing and installing the network we currently have, which is driven by a Leopard Server.
    Based on a year of experience working with Apple's newest airport extreme and capsule products, I would not use them in business and am moving towards a wireless network hd using Carbon Copy Cloner as my software. This is due in part to numerous calls to Apple for support on these items, having to reset them dozens of times, and being told by Apple support that using these products for business is not recommended.
    Carbon Copy Cloner is a great tool for a backup, especially for workstations, as you can create partitions for each computer on your HD and CCC will create *bootable* backups of your HD - a great lifesaver if a computer fails and you don't have time to reinstall everything.
    I will be putting the capsule and extreme devices on Craigslist for sale and hope to recoup enough to get the wireless network drive, which my research shows is the best way to get network backup solutions for small business.
    I hope this helps.

  • Creating a small office network with Leopard

    Here is the set up. I apologize for the length but I want to explain as much as possible.
    I work in a small ad agency that has 6 macs: 1 G4 mini (Tiger), 2 PowerMac G4 Mirrored (Tiger), 1 Cube G4 (Tiger), 1 MacBook (Leopard, 1 iMac CoreDuo (Leopard).
    The user names of our home directories are all over the place, some machines have the same user name (two different machines have the same user name "FRED" for example).
    Some of us connect to our network wirelessly and some through the ethernet plugs in the walls.
    We work off files on an External Hard Drive connected to a MacMini G4 running Leopard.
    We have had so much BAD LUCK with this.
    Some users can't save files that others worked on because of "insufficient privleges".
    SOOOO... we switched the MacMini's OS to Tiger because it worked before we upgraded to Leopard. Now we can't back up the External Hard Drive either by copying the files to a Firewire External Hard Drive or by using something like Carbon Copy cloner.
    I have clicked IGNORE PERMISSIONS of the External Hard Drive and the backup Firewire External Hard Drive and still no dice.
    SO.... We are starting over. We are getting an Intel MacMini as the brain and two USB externals to set up as a RAID for the file storage. We are then using a third external USB to run time machine.
    My questions:
    1) Should we create new user accounts on our existing machines to "start over", using unique names? A server guy from another ad agency suggested this.
    2) Is there a way to reset all file permissions on the existing external file storage hard drive so that EVERYONE can read and write? I would like to do this before trying to copy all these files to our new RAID External Hard Drives.
    Sorry this is so **** long and confusing, but I can't find any straight answers.

    jocko homo wrote:
    Thanks for the reply. I wish we could get Lepard server but the budget didn't include money to get it unfortunately.
    Any chance of looking at the budget again? It seems like an awful lot of work for something that only costs $500.
    Does that mean I set the UID for every user to the same Number? I'm not up on what a UID is unfortunately.
    It would definitely be a good idea. It probably won't do much to address your problem. It would just remove another layer of complexity. The UID is the user ID. Root is user ID 0. The first user is usually 501, second 502, etc. If you had each machine setup the same way, then user 505 on machine A would have full access to user 505's files on machine B. The actual names are irrelevant. It is the UID that is important.
    But again, this does not address your issue at all. You actually need user 505 to access user 501's files. That is something else. Ignoring permissions will work for local file systems, but not for networked file systems. Unfortunately, I'm not really that familiar with network security in an application environment like MacOS X. There are certainly ways to do it and MacOS X server is certainly one way. I don't know the others.

  • Small office network

    Hi there,
    I want to install/move our office over the weekend and have some lose ends, which i hope can be answered in this forum.
    First, let me start off mentioning what i intend to do:
    we have three (airport enabled) iMacs sitting in the middle of our office.
    At the far end of the office we have the DSL modem, a Gigabit Ethernet Switch, the airport extreme station.
    At the other end of the office, I have a HP Color LaserJet (networkable) and a PowerMac G5 1.8GhZ DP (has an airport card installed).
    I would like to have the three iMacs connected to the Internet, the Printer and the G5 PowerMac (which will serve as a server). I go about that by connecting the Modem with a jumper cable to the Gigabit switch, as well as the Ethernet cable (regular ONE-WAY) from the printer and the G5 into the Gigabit Switch, I assume. Then I lead one Ethernet Cable from the Gigabit Switch into the airport station, so that an (optional) laptop could access all of teh attached goodies.
    Eeventhough the iMacs are airport enabled, I would rather have the option of having them hardwired as well (for speed reasons). I just plug those ethernet cables inside the Gigabit Switch as well?
    Thats the technical part.
    Now a question about the PowerMac G5. Everyone on the network needs to access files which I will store on the G5, such as photo library and some word and xls documents. Can i just make everything shareable?
    Thank you in advance for any suggestions/input you might have.
    G5 imac, powermac, etc   Mac OS X (10.4.6)  

    It sounds like you have it right - if you're using wired ethernet connections just connect everything back to the switch.
    For the base station, make sure it's running in bridge rather than route mode - using AirPort Admin Utility, turn off the 'distribute IP addresses' option.
    As for the file sharing, I wouldn't share the entire drive, but designate one folder (or folders) as being shared. If this is running Mac OS X client (vs. Server) get a copy of SharePoints which will make it easy to select which folders are available for sharing.
    Unless you're also running as a directory server you'll also need to make sure that the G5 has an account for everyone that is going to log onto it to access the shared folders. You could use one common account, but that's not recommended.

Maybe you are looking for

  • PO in one currency and invoice in different currency

    Hi, Is it possible to have PO in one currency and invoice against the PO in a different currency? If yes, how? regards, Vimlesh

  • N96 voice tags problem

    Afternoon all Just upgraded from an N95 to an N96 and I have a problem. With the N95, all the contacts in my list had a voice tag automatically assigned to them, so all I had to do was hit the button, wait for the bleep, and say the name. This was gr

  • When clicking "Open" in InDesign, can I have it open up to Bridge instead of Finder?

    I'm looking to quit using Finder because it doesn't work well with our server (PC based). I would like when in InDesign or Photoshop, and I click to open a new file it would open up to Bridge instead of Finder (or Explorer in the PC world). Is this p

  • Green button not working

    Apart from the obvious battery issues my green button has stopped working. i cant make calls or answer calls with it. the other day whilst taking a picture the red light on the camera came on and wouldn't go off either, so i had to remove the battery

  • Photoshop elements editor not working

    Why won't my editor work??????!!!!!!!!  I have had it for years.....9 or 11, editor nor working....need help ASAP!!!!