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Joe Put a VPN appliance, say, from LinkSys inside your DSL router (also called a DSL modem? A Cisco 725 of some such?). Set up the LinbkSys to get its address automatically (DHCP) from your DSL Internet provider. Then have the LinkSys act as a DHCP server to your internal network. No need to make changes, AFAIK. LinkSys has an older one that can handle up to 70 connections and also is a router. HTH Vern -------------- Original message -------------- > > From: Jones, John (US) > > > > 1: Get a router that supports VPN connections. They aren't that > > expensive; I think they can be had for under $250. > > Not an option. I already have a DSL router from my DSL vendor, and I > don't particularly want to play with that in order to add VPN; that > means every time my vendor upgrades my router, I have to reconfigure > VPN. It's enough of a pain to get my NAT reconfigured. I'd rather go > the software route for the time being. > > > > 2: Remote desktop should work fine IF you have terminal services on > your > > W2K server or you're content with connecting to an XP PC. W2K Server > > comes with a license for 2 TS connections, but I don't think W2K Pro > > does. I'm not sure about XP Home (XP Pro allows the incoming remote > > desktop connection). Your travel machine is fine. That leaves some > > variant of VNC as probably the most logical choice. > > As it turns out, UltraVNC works fine. My biggest complaint is that it's > an utter CPU hog on the server machine, which means that running WDSC > through the remote link is not a real option. But everything else is > cool. > > > > Also, if you VPN in, can't you just work on your travel machine & > upload > > results over the VPN? That would eliminate the need for VNC/remote > > desktop/terminal services. While your travel machine may not have > > equivalent performance to your desktop(s), eliminating the remote > > control overhead may balance out the performance. > > There are a number of reasons I can't do this. There are some programs > which run on my desktop which can't be loaded onto my laptop. I also > have some pretty tight locks on what addresses can get into things, and > I'd prefer not to open them up to the laptop. > > Last but not least, it's nice to be able to run something on my PC to > compare it to something at a remote site and see the two side by side, > as it were. > > Joe > > -- > This is the PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users (PcTech) mailing list > To post a message email: PcTech@xxxxxxxxxxxx > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, > visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/pctech > or email: PcTech-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx > Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives > at http://archive.midrange.com/pctech.
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