13
Here are other initial
ro
erties of these
re-defi ned
rou
s, accounts, and
r
:
T
e
rou
@
uest-s
are contains two mem
ers, w
ic
are user
a
min” an
user “guest-s
are”.
Onl
user “admin” can access the share “
ublic”
The
older “guest-share” is a private
older
or user “guest-share”.
This means onl
user “
uest-share” can access this folder
The
older “admin” is a private
older
or user “admin”. This means
only user “admin” can access this
older
By using the web-based administration tool, you can modi
y these initial
ropert
es.
Before can
ou can be
in storin
data (other than as user “admin” or as user
guest-s
are”), you must use t
e we
-
ase
a
ministration too
to setup a
new user account that de
nes your User Name and Password. Furthermore,
ou have the o
tion to defi ne other
ro
erties for
our user account. For
example, each user can optionally be given their own private
older, which
is automatically assigned the same name as that user’s User Name. A user
can a
so
e
iven rea
-on
-
rivi
e
es, or rea
/write-
rivi
e
es, to ot
er
l
r
n th
riv
Connectin
the NAS Drive to Your LAN
Now that you have some understanding o
user accounts, you are ready
to connect your NAS drive to the LAN. Re
er to the illustration below and
follow these ste
s.
Ensure t
at
our LAN e
ui
ment is
owere
on an
t
at t
e LAN1
is operating properly.
We recommended that you
ollow the directions o
your LAN
e
ui
ment to enable a D
namic Host Confi
uration Protocol
(DHCP) server. This ma
be referenced in
our e
ui
ment’s
documentation as “Assign IP addresses automatically”.
Since you will administer the NAS drive settings using a web
browser on
our PC or Mac, ensure that this PC or Mac is
owered
n
n
nn
t
t
t
LAN.