2

I was doing Start - Run - '\\myfiles' under Windows XP and had access to some file directories over my network.

I dont know how to do the same thing under Ubuntu.

2 Answers 2

3

Use smb:// instead of \\ in the nautilus address line.

You can specifiy a username and a password, too. Like that: smb://username:password@hostname/. If you don't, nautilus will automatically ask you for it.


You can use all other supported protocols in the same way:

  • smb://username:password@hostname/ for Samba
  • ftp://username:password@hostname/ for FTP
  • sftp://username:password@hostname/ for FTP over SSH (also ssh:// )
  • dav://username:password@hostname/for WebDAV
  • davs://username:password@hostname/ for encrypted WebDAV
1
  • This is the right answer I think however it still does not work. I guess I have to contact my network administrator. Thanks.
    – Ghokun
    Oct 11, 2011 at 17:25
1

In Nautilus (the file browser), you should be able to go to Network in the side pane. That should bring up a list of network resources the computer can see; myfiles should be listed there.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .