Open any folder and go to Clear the check box How satisfied are you with this reply? Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site. In reply to Volunteer J's post on February 28, If you have XP Home, then you will need to boot your computer into Safe Mode Repeatedly tap the F8 key while your computer boots and then log in as an Administrator user.
After doing this, you will have the Security tab showing. HTH, JW. In reply to Wunders's post on March 1, To check permissions on a file or folder, follow these steps: Press and hold or right-click the file or folder, and then click Properties. Tap or click the Security tab. To determine whether a file or folder is encrypted, follow these steps: Press and hold or right-click the file or folder, and then tap or click Properties. Windows 7 You may not have ownership of a file or folder If you recently upgraded your computer to Windows 7 from an earlier version of Windows, some of your account information may have changed.
To take ownership of a file or a folder, follow these steps: Right-click the folder that you want to take ownership of, then click Properties. Click the name of the person that you want to give ownership to. To determine the permissions of the file or folder, follow these steps: Right-click the file or folder, then click Properties.
Click the Security tab. Right-click the file or folder, and then click Properties. To determine whether a file or folder is encrypted, follow these steps: Right-click the file or folder, and then click Properties. Issue 2: I cannot access, change, save, or delete files and folders. Cause A problem that prevents you from accessing or working with files and folders can occur for one or more of the following reasons: The folder ownership has changed You do not have the appropriate permissions The file is encrypted The file is corrupted The user profile is corrupted Resolution Windows 8 You may not have ownership of a file or folder If you recently upgraded your computer to Windows 8 from an earlier version of Windows, some of your account information may have changed.
To check permissions on a file or a folder, follow these steps: Press and hold or right-click the file or folder, and then click Properties. To create a local user account, follow these steps: Swipe from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings , and then tap Change PC settings. If you are using a mouse, point to the upper-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer down, click Settings , and then click Change PC settings In the navigation pane, tap or click Users.
Tap or click Local account. Enter your new account name. Tap or click Finish. To take ownership of a file or a folder, follow these steps: Right-click the folder that you want to take ownership of, and then click Properties. Under Group or user names, click your name to see the permissions you have.
To determine whether a file or folder is encrypted, follow these steps: Right-click the file, then click Properties. Click the General tab, and then click Advanced. Issue 3: I cannot open a file or folder after I upgrade to a new version of Windows.
Cause Problems that prevent you from accessing files and folders after you upgrade to a new version of Windows can occur for one or more of the following reasons: The folder ownership has changed. The files are being stored in a Windows. To take ownership of a file or a folder, follow these steps: Press and hold the folder that you want to take ownership of, then tap Properties.
Fix it for me Notes This wizard may be in English only. Let me fix it myself To manually retrieve the files, follow these steps: Open the desktop, tap the folder icon, and then click Computer. Double-tap or double-click the drive that Windows is installed on typically, drive C. Double-tap or double-click the Windows. Double-tap or double-click the Users folder. Double-tap or double-click your user name. Repeat steps for each user account on your computer. Let me fix it myself To manually retrieve the files, follow these steps: Click Start , then click Computer.
Double-click the drive that Windows is installed on typically, drive C. Double-click the Windows. Double-click the Users folder. Double-click your user name.
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Can you help us improve? Resolved my issue. Clear instructions. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped. Are the shared fles and folders available? Check the network sharing and workgroup settings and the kb on the other XP computers.
For the kb, you should see the link layer topology discovery mapper and responder in the properties of the network connection of the XP computers. Add Ipv6 to the network adapters on the XP computers if it is not there. Based on my research, I would like to suggest the following:. Temporarily disable or remove all the security software firewall, anti-virus, anti-spyware, etc. If you have enabled simple file sharing on Windows XP computer, please check if Guest account has also been enabled; you can also disable the simple file sharing and reconfigure the sharing on the Windows XP computer with the following Knowledge Base:.
How to disable simple file sharing and how to set permissions on a shared folder in Windows XP. Hope this helps. I am attempting to "see" shared folders on this machine, from a Win7 machine. I can not, tho I can see the Win7 shares from the XP. Both machines can ping each other. I have attempted the hot fixes suggested, for XP SP3 users, and have run into a dead end, as the system declares that the updates are earlier than the service pack installed, and will go not further.
I have also discovered that I can not remove the simple networking on XP Home, though the suggestion above seems to imply otherwise. Is there no way to make this work? Have tried everything from disabling firewalls to changing security suites to from CA to Windows Essentials on the Win 7. I have backed up and restored and still it wont work. I have scoured the Net and people seem to have the problem that XP can't see Win 7 My other laptup running Ubuntu is fine including printing.
I think I'll wipe Win 7 once warranty runs out and install Linux. Also my daughters laptop that has Vista works fine as well????? The Win 7 used to work fine then all of a sudden it doesn't.
So how to do this? First, you need to know the name of the computer which hosts the printer, and the name of the printer to be shared. Write down the name that you see here because this is the computer name.
Write down the name that you see here because this is the printer name.
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