I remember that it was a security thing in Flash 5, something having to do
with how some routers handle non-http traffic.

What I know is that you can 'piggy back' the traffic to port 80 on the
router side, but that is not always a solution. Some do not accept socket
connections on ports less than 1024.

M

-----Original Message-----
From: jon hall [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Thursday, January 09, 2003 3:17 PM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Re: Any modem users out there? I need you to test something for m e


No need for any gymnastics at all. I assume that the Flash player makes the
first connection to port 1935 on the server after it reads the swf file
which tells it this is a movie so go connect to the FlashComm server
(hopefully there is some security stuff I don't know about...).

Redirecting traffic from the server via a port forwarding utility or a
router would be trivial, the problem is that the Flash client might have
1935 hard coded...maybe it's a security thing?

-- 
 jon
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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