13
Here are other initial
p
ro
p
erties of these
p
re-defi ned
g
rou
p
s, accounts, and
sha
r
es
:
T
h
e
g
rou
p
@
g
uest-s
h
are contains two mem
b
ers, w
h
ic
h
are user
•
“
a
d
min” an
d
user “guest-s
h
are”.
Onl
y
user “admin” can access the share “
p
ublic”
.
•
The
f
older “guest-share” is a private
f
older
f
or user “guest-share”.
•
This means onl
y
user “
g
uest-share” can access this folder
.
The
f
older “admin” is a private
f
older
f
or user “admin”. This means
•
only user “admin” can access this
f
older
.
By using the web-based administration tool, you can modi
f
y these initial
p
ropert
i
es.
Before can
y
ou can be
g
in storin
g
data (other than as user “admin” or as user
“
guest-s
h
are”), you must use t
h
e we
b
-
b
ase
d
a
d
ministration too
l
to setup a
new user account that de
fi
nes your User Name and Password. Furthermore,
y
ou have the o
p
tion to defi ne other
p
ro
p
erties for
y
our user account. For
example, each user can optionally be given their own private
f
older, which
is automatically assigned the same name as that user’s User Name. A user
can a
l
so
b
e
g
iven rea
d
-on
ly
-
p
rivi
l
e
g
es, or rea
d
/write-
p
rivi
l
e
g
es, to ot
h
er
fo
l
de
r
s
o
n th
e
d
riv
e.
Connectin
g
the NAS Drive to Your LAN
Now that you have some understanding o
f
user accounts, you are ready
to connect your NAS drive to the LAN. Re
f
er to the illustration below and
follow these ste
p
s.
Ensure t
h
at
y
our LAN e
q
ui
p
ment is
p
owere
d
on an
d
t
h
at t
h
e LAN1
.
is operating properly.
We recommended that you
f
ollow the directions o
f
your LAN
2.
e
q
ui
p
ment to enable a D
y
namic Host Confi
g
uration Protocol
(DHCP) server. This ma
y
be referenced in
y
our e
q
ui
p
ment’s
documentation as “Assign IP addresses automatically”.
Since you will administer the NAS drive settings using a web
3.
browser on
y
our PC or Mac, ensure that this PC or Mac is
p
owered
o
n
a
n
d
co
nn
ec
t
ed
t
o
t
he
LAN.