How to Set Up a Network Drive

Today's TipsMake will show you how to set up a network drive on a Windows or Mac computer. A network drive is a shared folder that can be used by two or more computers on the same network.

On Windows

Picture 1 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

You need to make sure that the computers are sharing the same network. These computers must be on the same Internet network for the network drive you select to appear on the remaining computers.

Picture 2 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Turn on network discovery. If your computer isn't set up to detect other computers on the network, you'll need to enable this feature by:

Open Start

Importcontrol panel

Click Control Panel

Click Network and Sharing Center (you may need to click the Network and Internet heading first).

Click Change advanced sharing settings in the upper left.

Check the "Turn on network discovery" box.

Check the "Turn on file and printer sharing" box.

Click Save changes . It's at the bottom of the window.

Picture 3 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Open Start . Click the Windows logo in the lower left corner of the screen.

Picture 4 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Open File Explorer. Click the folder icon in the bottom left of the window.

Picture 5 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click This PC on the left side of the File Explorer window. The This PC window will open.

Picture 6 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click the Computer tab in the upper left of the window. The toolbar will appear near the top of the window.

Picture 7 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click the Map network drive icon. This option is located in the "Network" section of the toolbar. You need to make sure you click on the flash drive icon and not the Map network drive text .

Picture 8 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Select the drive letter. Click the "Drive" drop-down box and select a letter from the menu that appears. Thus, this letter will be chosen as the network drive name so you can recognize it later.

Picture 9 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click Browse… (Browse). This option is on the right side of the window. A window will pop up.

Picture 10 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Select the folder to use the drive. Click on the computer where you want to create the drive, then find and click the folder to use.

Picture 11 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click the OK button at the bottom of the window.

If an error appears, it means the folder you selected cannot be shared. This usually happens if the folder is set to read-only mode.

Picture 12 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click Finish at the bottom of the window. The network drive will be created and shared with all computers on the same network.

If the computer has been changed to another channel on the network, you will have to set up the network drive again.

Picture 13 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Access the drive on another computer on the same network. As long as the other computer on the same network has network discovery and file sharing enabled, you should be able to open the selected drive by going to This PC and double-clicking on the network drive located under the "Devices" heading. and drives" (Devices and drives).

On Mac

Picture 14 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

You need to make sure that the computers are sharing the same network. The computers must be on the same Internet network for the network drive of the computer you select to be displayed on the remaining computers.

Picture 15 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Turn on network discovery. If your computer isn't set up to detect other computers on the network, you'll need to enable this feature by:

Open the Apple menu

Click System Preferences. (System customization)

Click Sharing _

Check the "File Sharing" box.

Close the System Preferences window.

Picture 16 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Open Finder. Click the blue face icon in your Mac's Dock.

Picture 17 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Select folder. Click the folder on the left side of the Finder window to open it, then click to select the folder you want to use as a network drive.

Picture 18 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click the File menu item . It's at the top of the screen. A menu will drop down.

Picture 19 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click Get Info . This option is in the File drop-down menu . A window containing the folder's information will open.

Picture 20 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Copy the location of the folder. Click and drag on the text to the right of the "Where:" heading to select the folder location, then press ⌘ Command+ Cto copy the path.

This path is usually similar to "System/FolderName".

Picture 21 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click the Go menu item . It's at the top of the screen. A menu will drop down.

If you don't find Go in the menu bar, open a new Finder window to make it appear. You can also click on the desktop.

Picture 22 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click Connect to Server . This option is at the bottom of the Go drop-down menu . A window will pop up.

Picture 23 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Enter the computer name with slashes. You need to enter the "smb://" (or "ftp://") text field at the top of the Connect to Server window.

For example, if the computer's name is "Rhonda", you would enter Rhonda/it here.

Picture 24 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Paste the folder address. Press ⌘ Command+ Vto paste. The computer name and folder address will appear in the text field.

Picture 25 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click the + sign to the right of the address bar. The folder address will be added to your Mac.

Picture 26 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Click Connect . This blue button is at the bottom of the window.

Picture 27 of How to Set Up a Network Drive

Enter your login information when prompted. The username and password you need to enter here will vary by network, so ask your system administrator if you don't know this information.

After logging in, you will see a flash drive icon along with the folder name on your desktop.

Update 13 November 2023
Category

System

Mac OS X

Hardware

Game

Tech info

Technology

Science

Life

Application

Electric

Program

Mobile