How to share files and printers without HomeGroup on Windows 10 - Windows 10 home homegroup free

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Windows 10 home homegroup free



 

After you create a homegroup, the other PCs running Windows 10, Windows 8. Tap or click the control under Media devices if you want to allow devices on the network, such as TVs and game consoles, to play your shared content. Open File Explorer by swiping in from the right edge of the screen, tapping Search or if you're using a mouse, pointing to the upper-right corner of the screen, moving the mouse pointer down, and then clicking Search , entering File Explorer in the search box, and then tapping or clicking File Explorer.

Under Homegroup , tap or click the user account name of the person whose libraries you want to get to. To select libraries to share with all the members of your homegroup, swipe in from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings , and then tap Change PC settings. If you're 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. Then tap or click HomeGroup. To prevent a file or folder from being shared with anyone, tap or click the Share tab, and then tap or click Stop sharing.

To change the level of access to a file or folder, tap or click the Share tab, and then select either Homegroup view or Homegroup view and edit. If you need to share a location such as a drive or system folder, use the Advanced sharing option. Open the Print menu of the app you want to print from, select the homegroup printer, and then tap or click Print. Use this setting to share media with all devices on your network.

Note: Shared media isn't secure. Anyone connected to your network can receive your shared media. Swipe in from the right edge of the screen, and then tap Search. If you're using a mouse, point to the lower-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer up, and then click Search. In the search box, enter homegroup , and then click Settings. Tap or click Change the password , and then follow the instructions.

You might be asked for an admin password or to confirm your choice. When you set up a PC with Windows 7, a homegroup is created automatically. On the Share with other home computers running Windows 7 page, click Create a homegroup , and then follow the instructions.

You can access files and resources on other homegroup PCs, but you can't share your own files and resources with the homegroup. You'll need the homegroup password, which you can get from the person who created the homegroup.

Note: If you don't see the Join now button, there might not be a homegroup available. In the navigation pane the left pane , under Homegroup , click the user account name of the person whose files you want to access. In the file list, double-click the library you want to access, and then double-click the file or folder you want. When you created or joined your homegroup, you selected the libraries you wanted to share with other people in the homegroup. Libraries are initially shared with Read access, which means that you can look at or listen to what's in the library, but you can't make changes to the files in it.

You can adjust the level of access later, and you can exclude specific files and folders from sharing. Clear the check box for each library you don't want shared, and then click Save changes.

To prevent the file or folder from being shared with anyone, in the toolbar, click Share with , and then click Nobody. To share the file or folder with some people but not others, in the toolbar, click Share with , click Specific people , select each person you want to share with, and then click Add. Click Share when you're finished. After the printer is shared, you can access it through the Print dialog box in any program, just like a printer that's directly connected to your PC.

Select the Printers check box, and then click Save changes. On the PC the printer is physically connected to, click the Start button, click Control Panel , type homegroup in the search box, and then click HomeGroup.

If you don't already have a driver installed for the printer, click Install driver in the dialog box that appears. Change settings for network discovery, file sharing, Public folder sharing, password-protected sharing, homegroup connections, and file sharing connections.

Windows 10 Windows 8. Notes: HomeGroup has been removed from Windows 10 Version Notes: If a homegroup already exists on your network, you'll be asked to join it instead of creating a new one. Notes: PCs that are turned off, hibernating, or asleep won't be available as part of the homegroup. What's a homegroup? Create a homegroup When you set up a PC with Windows 8. To create a homegroup Open HomeGroup by swiping in from the right edge of the screen, tapping Settings or if you're using a mouse, pointing to the lower-right corner of the screen, moving the mouse pointer up, and then clicking Settings , tapping or clicking Change PC settings , tapping or click Network , and then tapping or clicking HomeGroup.

Tap or click Create. Select the libraries and devices you want to share with the homegroup. Notes: PCs that are turned off, hibernating, or asleep won't appear as part of the homegroup. Create a homegroup When you set up a PC with Windows 7, a homegroup is created automatically. Notes: PCs that are turned off, hibernating, or asleep won't appear in the navigation pane.

Need more help? Join the discussion. Was this information helpful? Yes No. Thank you! Any more feedback? The more you tell us the more we can help.

Can you help us improve? Resolved my issue. Clear instructions. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped. Didn't match my screen. Incorrect instructions. Too technical. Not enough information. Not enough pictures. Any additional feedback? Submit feedback. His primary focus is to write comprehensive how-tos to help users get the most out of Windows 10 and its many related technologies. Windows Central Windows Central. Mauro Huculak. More about windows Windows 10 version 22H2 announced, and its first build is available fo Topics Windows 10 Help.

See all comments 9. I used homegroup everyday on my. When will Microsoft learn that the default option when sharing a file should be view only? Otherwise sharing can be a very dangerous thing to do. Useful gide, but this new sharing thing sucks big time. Thanks Microsoft! Click the Browse button. Double-click the computer name sharing the printer.

No option anywhere to do this. Unfortunately my Laptop is Windows 10 and upgraded last wednesday. Pc is win 7 and the machines were a foot apart, but homegroup doesnt exist.

Suggested use one drive.. So Upload to cloud, Download from cloud to cover 1 ft of real space, but uses my bandwidth. Set it up estimated time 16 hours.

Went back to memory stick but even then took 20 minutes to load the stick and 20 to unload it. Why the F did microsoft remove homegroup. I could have all my machines linked with set permissions but now with all the 'sharing' my win 7 machine can see the laptop but hasn't permissions to access the folders, the laptop cant see the pc at all.

And to add to the crap, sharing is with everyone when it's done via ip address so all that security layer is gone. It's like a petrol station deciding that diesel is old and will remove the pumps despite half the cars in the country still using diesel. Force people to change to something else regardless of their preferences. I totally agree with you, but at least the workaround isn't TOO horrible.

Just do what I did reference below and you'll be back to sharing locally in no time. There wouldn't be a need for homegroup if networking was plug and play. But nothing is straight forward in Seattle. I agree with you sharing is a pain in Windows, always has been. Credentials are nonsensical when the computer has no password. The horror is that an cheap android phone can see a share folder instantly. Which usually anonymous means anonymous but in Seattle it means password no one knows. No one knows because it doesn't exist.

Since I'm only sharing from our server to those in our family on our network, we use the Share option in File Explorer. We have specific folders shared music, documents, pictues. Our server has its own Microsoft account that is joined to our Office account. That means it has a full 1TB to back up the OneDrive.

Anyway, all of our PCs and tablets are configured with mapped drives, connected to each of the shared folders on the server. I created a specific local account on the server that my wife and I reference during mapping of the drives. It was quick and works consistently. That's all good but it's a bit difficult to justify a server when in principle anything with a drive can hold a share. Windows Central Newsletter.

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