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Saturday, September 10, 2011

Difference Between a Workgroup and a Domain

Difference Between a Workgroup and a Domain

What’s the difference between a workgroup and a domain–based network?
Why Set Up a Domain at Home?

Difference between a Workgroup and a Domain
What’s the difference between a workgroup and a domain–based network? A workgroup is two or more computers networked together. A workgroup is often called a peer–to–peer network because the computers are all peers to one another. No one machine is in charge, and security and other settings have to be made on each individual computer. In a domain, on the other hand, the networked computers have a definite hierarchy in that computers are either servers or clients. Domains have a unified security policy set on the domain controllers (servers) and users on client machines are authenticated by a server when logging on. The usual rule of thumb is that workgroups are manageable up to about ten computers; after that a domain is recommended. However, there are valid reasons for setting up a domain–based home network instead of a workgroup.  More................

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