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judith
December 12th 03, 06:05 AM
Hi. Hope that someone can help. I am sharing my laptop
over a home network. I have no problems being able
to "copy/paste" files from one computer to the other but
there is one folder, and the files thereunder, cannot be
copied from one to the other. I have the option correctly
chosen to "share" these with the respective computers.
When I try to copy say a .mp3 from the laptop to the
desktop I receive the following....'Access is denied.
Make sure the disk is not full or right protected." The
only problem I see when I click on the folder>properties
is that the "Attributes" states that it is "read only."
No matter how many times I "unclick" the "read-only"
attribute>apply>ok...when I double check it, it still
reads "read-only."
thanks
judith

Kent W. England [MVP]
December 12th 03, 06:06 AM
Don't worry about that read-only attribute, it doesn't mean anything.
You likely have some bad permissions on the files themselves as a result
of the way your file st^Hharing software works.

Access the security tab (safe mode for XP Home) for the problem folder
from the folder properties (right-click). Click the Advanced button and
then check the box that says "propagate permissions to child objects" or
words to that effect. This will cause the parent folder permissions to
be applied to the files that can't be read or copied.

--
Kent W. England, Microsoft MVP for Windows



"judith" > wrote in
message ...

> Hi. Hope that someone can help. I am sharing my laptop
> over a home network. I have no problems being able
> to "copy/paste" files from one computer to the other but
> there is one folder, and the files thereunder, cannot be
> copied from one to the other. I have the option correctly
> chosen to "share" these with the respective computers.
> When I try to copy say a .mp3 from the laptop to the
> desktop I receive the following....'Access is denied.
> Make sure the disk is not full or right protected." The
> only problem I see when I click on the folder>properties
> is that the "Attributes" states that it is "read only."
> No matter how many times I "unclick" the "read-only"
> attribute>apply>ok...when I double check it, it still
> reads "read-only."
> thanks
> judith

judith
December 12th 03, 06:06 AM
Hey Kent.

Thanks very much. That worked like a charm. I had my
doubts. I always seem to goof-up on those kinds of
procedures. Followed your directions and.viola! Thanks
very much again for taking the time to answer my
question. I certainly appreciate it. That was very kind
of you.

jd

>-----Original Message-----
>Don't worry about that read-only attribute, it doesn't
mean anything.
>You likely have some bad permissions on the files
themselves as a result
>of the way your file st^Hharing software works.
>
>Access the security tab (safe mode for XP Home) for the
problem folder
>from the folder properties (right-click). Click the
Advanced button and
>then check the box that says "propagate permissions to
child objects" or
>words to that effect. This will cause the parent folder
permissions to
>be applied to the files that can't be read or copied.
>
>--
>Kent W. England, Microsoft MVP for Windows
>
>
>
>"judith" > wrote in
>message ...
>
>> Hi. Hope that someone can help. I am sharing my laptop
>> over a home network. I have no problems being able
>> to "copy/paste" files from one computer to the other but
>> there is one folder, and the files thereunder, cannot be
>> copied from one to the other. I have the option
correctly
>> chosen to "share" these with the respective computers.
>> When I try to copy say a .mp3 from the laptop to the
>> desktop I receive the following....'Access is denied.
>> Make sure the disk is not full or right protected." The
>> only problem I see when I click on the folder>properties
>> is that the "Attributes" states that it is "read only."
>> No matter how many times I "unclick" the "read-only"
>> attribute>apply>ok...when I double check it, it still
>> reads "read-only."
>> thanks
>> judith
>
>.
>

Kent W. England [MVP]
December 12th 03, 06:08 AM
All of us who help deeply appreciate followups reporting good results
and even bad results. It helps us keep our advice up-to-date and
accurate. And the gratitude is also very nice.

--
Kent W. England, Microsoft MVP for Windows


"judith" > wrote in
message ...
> Hey Kent.
>
> Thanks very much. That worked like a charm. I had my
> doubts. I always seem to goof-up on those kinds of
> procedures. Followed your directions and.viola! Thanks
> very much again for taking the time to answer my
> question. I certainly appreciate it. That was very kind
> of you.

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