just trying to connect them to a shared network or homegroup as my laptop is calling it.
OK, got it.
Your home's NETWORK is different than a Windows HOMEGROUP on your home network.
So, at minimum if you wanted to connect a Windows laptop to:
(1) Your home's network, and
(2) the Windows Homegroup on your home network - you will need the following, in the following order:
(a) You need to know your home network name
(e.g. "LX7W6" - or "LXHOME" - whatever it's called)
(b) You need to know the SSID or network access code/security key to your home network
(you can cheat and get this by right clicking on your home network properties of another Windows laptop in your house, and then clicking the checkbox to "show characters" because the key will be a bunch of bullets (*********) ion an effort to mask it)
Now - if you connect to the home network - your new laptop will be able to access the Internet, and any shared devices (printers, hard drives, etc.) on your home network.
(c) If you wish to connect to the Windows homegroup, you will need the homegroup's access code/security key - whatever the hell its called, which should also be obtainable from an existing Windows laptop as noted above...
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in all honesty, it seems like you should be able to share files between the tow laptops with a flash drive/USB drive without having the machines on the same homegroup - that is if both laptops have application software (e.g. Photoshop) that can read the same file types.
You could even e-mail the files to yourself and then download them to the other laptop if you wanted too... (just thinking out loud)
I'm no expert, but the homegroup is basically a means of connecting to the shared components of other Windows laptops (user profiles, shared documents/folders, shared printers, etc.)
i can see the other laptops in the house but i've been fooling with this all morning and my brain hurts.
i just need to share files without emailing everything to myself...also...no photoshop on the laptop and i need it
Right. So, you need to use Photoshop on the machine that it is installed on.
You cannot - at least to my knowledge - run Photoshop on an iMac from a Windows laptop as if Photoshop were on the Windows laptop - if that makes any sense whatsoever.
Let me know how it goes, I'll be around for a bit!
