Rick Meeker wrote: > Are you using the Netware client to login, or are you trying to login > through the standard Windows login? > On the Windows side I just went to the Network Neighborhood and double clicked then looked at Computers near me(using Windows 2000). Double clicked on the Netware server name and tried both admin w/ the correct password and admin.support.ripcrd.org with the same password and neither work. My next step will be to load the netware client on the windows box. That is probably the problem. On the server install I did install the windows services and the NFS services, so I didn't think I would need the netware client just to connect. Maybe because I am trying to connect as admin. They don't let you create any regular users at install time like Linux. I don't know how many people here have checked out Netware or use it on a regular basis, but it has some striking similarities to Linux. If the OpenLDAP guys got their stuff simplified a little there wouldn't be much need for Netware at all. The NDS stuff from what I've read uses the X.500 protocol, which is LDAP, and they just have a neat little GUI tool for administration. If I can get it to work, I'm going to learn some more about LDAP from it before I install OpenLDAP on Linux. From having worked w/ Active Directory on Windows 2000 I see a LOT of similarities between it and NDS (AD also uses the X.500 protocol). I'm just rambling here, but maybe this will make sense to all of you. Netware has a GUI that can load at boot time (or can be turned off) and it is an accelerated X server. I think the screen said Xi graphics, but it went by real fast. Like under Linux, but unlike Windows, you can restart the X server if it gets fubared. One more thing, the GUI for NDS admin is a program run in a JVM, so that would make it easily portable to other systems. Why it was easy to port to Linux. -- A Computer without Microsoft is like a chocolate cake without mustard. -as seen on IRC