What is EARTHNET?

EARTHNET is simply the name of the Windows NT/2000/XP domain we have in the Dept. of Earth Science. Simply put, a Windows domain is a collection of users and computers, for the purpose of controlling access to Windows networking resources. It is separate from "the Internet". It is possible to be "on the Internet" and not be "on EARTHNET".

Who needs to be on EARTHNET?

How do you access EARTHNET?

Step 1: Obtain an EARTHNET account (username and password) by stopping by room 301 and asking Alex, or Mary in an emergency. Anybody who is in the department, working for a department member, or in a class that requires use of the PC lab may obtain an account. This account is separate from your email account (Owlnet or RUF) and is also separate from your GEONET Unix account if you have one. However, we recommend you use the same username as your e-mail username. We do not recommend that you use the same password.

Step 2: If you are only using public machines, you may skip this step and go on to step 3. If you want to use EARTHNET from your desktop machine (personal or Rice-owned), contact Alex to get it added to the domain. NB: If you have a personal computer that is running Windows XP home edition, there is no way to join the EARTHNET domain. If you are considering an operating system purchase or a new computer purchase, make sure to choose Windows XP Professional if you want to make your life easier.

Step 3: Windows NT, Windows 2000 and Windows XP Professional have a confusing approach to handling network vs. non-network logins. When you log in, you will see a dialog box with three fields: username, password and domain. Any computer which is a part of a domain will actually have two "domains" available: one that is the actual domain it is in, and one for the local machine itself. For example, if your PC was named ALICE, in the EARTHNET domain, when you logged in you would have two choices for a domain: "EARTHNET" and "ALICE (this computer)". This is confusing to newcomers because their natural tendency is to log in with the option labeled "this computer". However, for the most part you will not have a local login, only a network login, so attempting to log into the local domain would fail. Also, even if it did work (e.g. if it was your own personal computer and you had set up a local account with the same username and password) you would have problems accessing your network resources because as far as the Windows system is concerned, ALICE\username and EARTHNET\username are completely different users, and ALICE\username would not be in the list of users allowed to access things like printers and shared network folders. So, to make a long explanation short, make sure you are logging into EARTHNET.

What are the advantages to being in EARTHNET?

Windows domains, particularly after Windows 2000 Server and Active Directory came long, can provide a whole host of services, from home directories and organizational units to workload delegation and integration with LDAP and beyond (don't worry if you don't understand any of that). For the most part, these features are designed for large to enormous muti-site organizations. We are not taking advantage of the majority of the advanced features. We are a small organization with a high rate of user turnover and the amount of effort and training that would be required does not make sense given the theoretical return. There are basically only two major purposes to the domain that users are aware of: access control and resource sharing.

How do I (add a printer, access files on a different computer)?

How to add a network printer
How to map network drives/access remote files
2003 Alex Hemsath