Re: unable to do port forwarding

2006-11-08 Thread Scott C. Best

Heyaz. A good alternative to Hamachi is the echoServer approach.
It works in a similar way, making the VNC connection appear to be
outgoing from the point of view of both firewalls. Unlike Hamachi,
though: (1) you can own and operate your own reflection server (rather
than relying on run by someone you don't know from childhood), and
(2) it works using normal TCP connections, rather than relying on a
limitation in most firewalls that do not statefully filter UDP sessions.
Using TCP also allows the echoServer approach to work when there's a
web-proxy in addition to a firewall.

To work with RealVNC, you can use the EchoVNC wrapper, available
here: http://www.echovnc.com;. We've also integrated the capability
directly into our own VNC flavor, available here:

ftp://ftp.echogent.com/UltraVNC/beta

More info on the whole approach is here:

http://www.echogent.com/tech.htm

hope it helps,
Scott


Mick wrote:

This looks good, as long as you trust *their* servers with *your* login
details . . .  As I do not know them personally, from childhood, I wouldn't
really trust them.


All Hamachi traffic, starting at each peer, is encrypted with the
AES-256 cypher. And unless you're running on a relay, your traffic
doesn't touch their servers at all.


I think that the Client adding feature managed from the server side that VNC
offers is a good solution to this problem and by definition more secure than
involving third parties.


If that works, then by all means use it, being the simplest options. The
reason I proffered Hamachi was because most everyone tends to be behind
a router these days, making H the next simplest solution -- sometimes
even fiddling with your router doesn't end up solving the issue.

snip
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Re: unable to do port forwarding

2006-11-07 Thread ·· ħþø ··

Mick wrote:

This looks good, as long as you trust *their* servers with *your* login
details . . .  As I do not know them personally, from childhood, I wouldn't
really trust them.


All Hamachi traffic, starting at each peer, is encrypted with the 
AES-256 cypher. And unless you're running on a relay, your traffic 
doesn't touch their servers at all.



I think that the Client adding feature managed from the server side that VNC
offers is a good solution to this problem and by definition more secure than
involving third parties.


If that works, then by all means use it, being the simplest options. The 
reason I proffered Hamachi was because most everyone tends to be behind 
a router these days, making H the next simplest solution -- sometimes 
even fiddling with your router doesn't end up solving the issue.



Chris
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Re: unable to do port forwarding

2006-11-06 Thread ·· ħþø ··

Jon wrote:

Hi, im trying to set up a VNC for my sister at college so i can help with her problems 
without now click start the only issue is, as you might have guessed, is 
she does not have access to her routers at school. i have already done port forwarding on 
my router, so how can i connect to her computer when she cant do port forwarding? Thanks


I use VNC over Hamachi (http://www.hamachi.cc) for friends at different 
colleges; works a charm, except that they have to add me as a client, 
rather than me connecting of my own accord -- oh well, more security for 
them. In terms of setting up H, it's about as painless as you can get. 
Oh, and it's free. :]

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