Accessing Your Digital Media; Windows System Passwords; Macintosh Osx; Linux - NETGEAR NTV550 - Ultimate HD Media Player User Manual

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NTV550 Ultimate HD Media Player User Manual
If you are using a Windows PC to share media content, allow access to the following ports:
139 TCP, 445 TCP, 137 UDP, and 138 UDP for file-sharing services.
If you are using Windows Media Connect to share media from Windows, configure your
desktop firewall to allow ports 10243 TCP and 10280–10284 UDP. If you are using the UPNP
Framework under Windows XP, configure your desktop firewall to allow port 1900 UDP and
2869 TCP. For more information see

Accessing Your Digital Media

The following sections provide some suggestions for accessing digital media with Windows,
Macintosh OSX, and Linux.

Windows System Passwords

If your system requires a password on startup, you need to use one of these access
methods:
Recommended: Enable guest access on PCs that have a startup password. From the
Windows Start menu, select Settings > Control Panel > User Accounts, and enable
guest access.
Manually enter passwords on your Ultimate HD Media Player.
Remove the password from the main administrator account.

Macintosh OSX

Turn off the Macintosh firewall, and then select the sharing icon from system preferences.
1.
Click Firewall, select Stop, and verify that Firewall off is displayed.
2.
Select the sharing icon from system preferences, and select the Windows Sharing check
box. Make sure that Windows Sharing On is displayed.
Once the system is up and running, for better security you can configure your OSX firewall to
allow file access while blocking other network ports. For file sharing you must allow access
through TCP ports 139 and 445, and UDP ports 137 and 138.

Linux

You need to load and install a Samba server.
On Redhat 9 systems, click the Red Hat button, and select
System Settings > Server Settings > Samba Server. Click Add in the dialog box that
displays.
On other systems, you might need to install the Samba server (smbd) manually and
modify the samba configuration file (/etc/smb.conf on most systems; select the man smbd
check box). If Samba is not installed, see http://www.samba.org.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/886257/.
Chapter 6. Troubleshooting
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