"Dave" <> wrote in message
news:...
>
> "Seth" <> wrote in message
> news:i4cc3u$pk7$...
>>
>> "Ken Blake" <> wrote in message
>> news:...
>>> On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 14:37:29 -0500, "Dave" <>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> "Ken Blake" <> wrote in message
>>>> news:...
>>>> > On Sat, 14 Aug 2010 18:28:04 -0500, "Dave" <>
>>>> > wrote:
>>>> >
>>>> >>
>>>> >> "JKConey" <> wrote in message
>>>> >> news:i445ac$drj$...
>>>> >> >
>>>> >> > "Dave" <> wrote in message
>>>> >> > news:...
>>>> >> >> I'm running Win7 Home Premium and want to switch to Professional.
>>>> >> >> Can
>>>> >> >> I
>>>> >> >> do this with an Win7 Pro Upgrade?
>>>> >
>>>> >
>>>> >>
>>>> >> From what I understand it will network better than Home.
>>>> >
>>>> >
>>>> >
>>>> > No, not true. If you want to join a domain, yes, you need
>>>> > Professional. But for peer-to-peer networking, they are the same.
>>>> >
>>>> >
>>>>
>>>> I think my terminology is lacking, sorry for that. What I have is a
>>>> router
>>>> attached to my desktop and I wireless connect from my laptop and
>>>> iPhone. The
>>>> router has a port I can plug a backup drive into, but I can't get it to
>>>> work. I admit I may not have spent as much time on debugging as I
>>>> should,
>>>> and someone told me Professional would do this easily. Since I can get
>>>> it
>>>> really reasonable, I thought I'd give it a shot.
>>>
>>>
>>> What kind of port is this? Is this just a plain USB drive?
>>>
>>> Two points:
>>>
>>> 1. You can't just plug a plain USB drive into a router. You can plug
>>> in a drive with an ethernet connection that works as a network device.
>>
>> You can with certain routers that have provisions specifically for this
>> purpose. I've already responded to the OP asking for the make/model of
>> said device so we can check it's specs and manual.
>>
>>>
>>> 2. Windows 7 Home Premium and Professional should work exactly the
>>> same with this. I'm afraid that whoever told you differently is just
>>> incorrect.
>>
>> Yeah, I can't see why Pro would make a difference either, but maybe the
>> manual for the specific device could either shed some light or completely
>> dispel any thoughts to the contrary.
>
> The router is a Belkin F58235-4 V2 and the port is USB. It is dedicated to
> a storage device like a backup drive. As I said before, I have not put a
> lot of time into trying to sort it out, mostly due to the fact I thought
> it would be plug-and-play if I installed Professional.
(I am going to assume you meant the F5D8235-4)
Checked the manual and I see no reason why Win7 Pro would make a difference
over the other flavors. You merely attach a USB storage device to the
router, install the "Storage Manager" application to at least 1 computer (so
you can configure it and assign a device name (what Windows would refer to
as a "share")) and then "map" drives to it from each PC you want to access
the device via the path \\router_IP\DeviceName (replacing "router_IP with
the router's address, 192.168.2.1 be default) and "DeviceName" with the
share as described above.
See page 22 of the PDF (page 20 of the manual)
http://cache-www.belkin.com/support/...00736_0708.pdf