The difference between a local drive and a network drive:

Drive A, Drive C, and Drive D are all examples of local drives. They are only accessible when a user is working on a particular workstation.

To start open Windows Explorer (How to open Windows Explorer in Windows 10), then right click on "This PC" (on Windows 11 the “Map network drive” is under the “Show more options” selection)

Right-click on My Computer to get the Map network drive option

or at the top select the Computer tab and click on "Map network drive”

The Map network drive option at the top of the Computer tab in Explorer

Drive N and Drive R are examples of network drives. They are accessible from all workstations belonging to the network. However, some of these drives are not available unless you map (point to) them.

To map a network drive:

Menu to map a network folder

You will then be prompted for credentials as follows. Click on 'More choices'

The credentials prompt showing the 'More choices' option

Click on 'Use a different account'. In the "User name" field, type in "Nexus\" (no quotes) followed by the userid for the account you are mapping to (e.g. Nexus\myuserid). Then enter your UW password in the "Password" field and click OK.

Entering a different user account and password

Still having trouble? Connect to a remote help session (service only available during business hours and is dependant upon availability).