First post, by HoneyBadger1650
Not positive if this is the correct place for this kind of question, but it seemed the most fitting to me.
I'm running Windows 95 ver 4.00.950a with IE 5.5 installed. This PC is connected to a wireless bridge via ethernet, as is my 2TB Seagate GoFlex Home NAS system. The NAS can be seen by all computers in the household including the Win 95 PC (If I open Network Neighborhood, it lists the Goflex twice, but that's normal.). Normally what I would do on a "modern" PC (being anything from XP on up to 10) is open the Network tab of Windows Explorer, enter my credentials for the NAS, and select my share folder. This folder would then have all my other folders (documents, program executables, music, etc.) shown on screen and I could navigate them like you would any other drive. The NAS doesn't require any special client side software like the included Seagate Dashboard in order to work, and I always just access the drive like I mentioned previously: by it being detected automatically by the network as a file server. My problem, however, is this: when I try and access the drive through Network Neighborhood on my Win 95 PC, all I can see is the print server (which is set up as well with my printer connected to the USB port on the back of the NAS). I've come up with the reason for me not being able to see the share names is due to the lack of NTFS support in Windows 95. To combat this, I typed the drive's network address into a Windows Explorer address bar. Once I do this and I bring myself to the "root" directory of my desired share folder, however, I'm unable to double click on any of the folders. Instead, an error message appears stating "The network name cannot be found". I can access the folders directly by typing the folder name in the address bar, but it doesn't seem like that's the right way to go about accessing files. Whats more, I can't run any executable files from these folders at all. instead, I have to copy the individual folder or file to the PC's hard drive, and that completely negates the use of the network drive entirely. I could just as easily remove the CF card which is acting as the HDD and plug it into my Win 10 PC, copy the files I need, and run them from there. With a 2GB CF card, this creates a space shortage. Being able to run these programs straight off the NAS like I did with a prior Windows 98 installation (on the same PC mind you) would help this storage shortage tremendously. I'm very comfortable with networking on modern OS's, but as for 95, 98, etc. I've never really worked with their networking in depth to know how to solve this kind of problem.
Any help would be greatly appreciated, and please let me know if I need to add any information!