How to Increase the 10 Connection Limit on a Windows LAN
Alrighty, first a few more words about Windows Networking. If a computer is running Windows XP Home, the max number of connections that can be made to/from that computer on the LAN is 5. If the machine is running XP Pro, Vista, etc. then the max is 10.
Also, you have to understand that the limit refers to connections, not number of computers. Technically, you can have a LAN with 500 Windows machines, and as long as no more than 10 computers are trying to connect to any other computer, everything will work okay. But you will still probably have a few headaches like when you browse Network Neighborhood, not all the computers will show up. That’s pretty annoying.
So now, here’s how you fix it:
First, type
Win-R
to open the “Run” dialog box, and type gpedit.msc
.
At this point, one of two things will happen:
- You have a fancier version of Windows, so a nice management console will pop up.
- You have a less fancy version of Windows, so it will give you an error message.
If you see the management window, then navigate thisaway:
Computer Config -> Windows Settings -> Security Settings -> Local Policies -> Security Option
And set
Interactive Logon
to 50
(the maximum) or 0
(i.e. disable caching completely)
If you get the error message instead of the management window, then do the following:
- Type
Win-R
- Type
regedt32
and hit Enter - Search for the following entry:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\CachedLogonsCount
- Change
CachedLogonsCount
to50
(the max) or0
(disabled) - Close the Registry Editor
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