I recall putting an SD card in two different Ricoh readers under different
Linux OS' and being baffled until I worked out the read-only tab worked in
different positions in each, after which the SD card was convinced it was
read only after you swapped back, so you had to switch it a second time
bef
> It seems that SSL/TLS tunnels seem more popular now days.
Of course. They are extraordinarily simple to set up, and provide all the
security you need. IPSec is largely a relic...
Vic.
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On 18 November 2011 18:28, Vic wrote:
>
>> Yes, but there is a "NAT traversal" option with IPSEC where they put
>> the encrypted payload in UDP packets.
>> That method is much more likely to get through.
>
> That's NAT-T. To quote from Microsoft's own page[1]:
>
> "We do not recommend Internet Pro
On 18/11/11 18:28, Vic wrote:
NAT-T is considered a security risk, and is disabled by default. It's best
that it remain so.
Agreed... pity in my case both devices were behind NAT firewalls...
The situation is, apparently, rare and we evaluated the options and
decided it was probably best to ma
On 18 November 2011 16:58, Bryn Jones wrote:
> Thanks Vic,
>
> I'm going to 'assume' you are right re SDHC (for now).
>
> All the kern.log reveals is -
> Nov 18 16:54:08 HP2 kernel: [135648.708306] usb 1-5: new high speed USB
> device using ehci_hcd and address 59
> Nov 18 16:54:08 HP2 kernel: [13
> Yes, but there is a "NAT traversal" option with IPSEC where they put
> the encrypted payload in UDP packets.
> That method is much more likely to get through.
That's NAT-T. To quote from Microsoft's own page[1]:
"We do not recommend Internet Protocol security (IPSec) network address
translatio
On 18 November 2011 16:20, Vic wrote:
>
>> ESP packets .. those are the ones that know what data you want before
>> you ask for it.
>
> ESP is part of why IPSec is so damned horrible - it's IP, but it's
> protocol 50 (Note: *protocol*, not port).
>
Yes, but there is a "NAT traversal" option with
I need a willing (or not so willing, I'm not picky) volunteer to look
after a box of LUG equipment - mainly printer, firewall, cables. It's
just the one box (it's compresssed over the years as things have
become obsolete).
I'm finally moving out of Hampshire to the big smoke as an opportunity
to
On 18/11/2011 16:20, Vic wrote:
OpenVPN has a lot to recommend it. But the first question I would ask is
this: what, exactly, are you trying to enable with this tunnel?
With hindsight I should have said at the start, but I thought the VPN
should be a relatively minor issue.
The company for w
Two different adapters.
Both with lock switches open.
Both tested through this laptops internal reader and a USB SD adapter.
Both working with spare 8gb card.
Also tested with 2 machines.
:/
Bryn
On 18/11/11 17:06, Vic wrote:
Nov 18 16:54:10 HP2 kernel: [135650.375604] sd 27:0:0:0: [sdb] Writ
> Nov 18 16:54:10 HP2 kernel: [135650.375604] sd 27:0:0:0: [sdb] Write
> Protect is on
OK, your machine believes you' redelberately tellig it not to write to the
card.
How do you plug it in? Adaptor? Is there a lock switch - and if not, *was*
there a lock switch?
Vic.
--
Please post to: Hamps
Thanks Vic,
I'm going to 'assume' you are right re SDHC (for now).
All the kern.log reveals is -
Nov 18 16:54:08 HP2 kernel: [135648.708306] usb 1-5: new high speed USB
device using ehci_hcd and address 59
Nov 18 16:54:08 HP2 kernel: [135648.849530] scsi27 : usb-storage 1-5:1.0
Nov 18 16:54:09
> Interestingly I tried it in a card reader directly and it didn't even
> show up.
Does that card reader explicitly claim SDHC operation? A standard SD
reader won't see a SDHC card (and 16GB is SDHC).
> My hearts saying its died but I'm in no way shape or form an expert on
> these things!.
You
Yup exactly, 2 different adapters both unlocked and no joy.
Interestingly I tried it in a card reader directly and it didn't even
show up.
My hearts saying its died but I'm in no way shape or form an expert on
these things!.
On 18/11/11 16:22, Vic wrote:
Look on the left hand side, you will
> Look on the left hand side, you will see a "lock" slider:
MicroSD doesn't have the lock slider (although a SD adaptor might).
Vic.
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On 18 November 2011 16:19, Tony Whitmore wrote:
>
> Look on the left hand side, you will see a "lock" slider:
>
> http://www.tracyandmatt.co.uk/blogs/media/blogs/tracyandmatts_blog/sandisk-2gb-sd-card.jpg
>
> This may be in the wrong position, which will cause the medium to be
> read-only. Altern
> ESP packets .. those are the ones that know what data you want before
> you ask for it.
ESP is part of why IPSec is so damned horrible - it's IP, but it's
protocol 50 (Note: *protocol*, not port).
> At this moment it feels like everything with the probable exception of
> OpenVPN is a bit of a
On 18.11.2011 16:08, Bryn Jones wrote:
Hi,
I have a 16gb micro sd that's suddenly read only. Tried gparted etc.
and getting nowhere.
Anyone got any ideas?.
Look on the left hand side, you will see a "lock" slider:
http://www.tracyandmatt.co.uk/blogs/media/blogs/tracyandmatts_blog/sandisk-2gb
On 18/11/2011 10:20, Chris Malton wrote:
On Fri, 18 Nov 2011 09:50:38 +, Gordon Scott wrote:
I'm not sure which model our router is, I'll check next time I'm in
the office (or maybe 'phone and ask), but it's definitely a Draytek
Vigor with WiFi and three aerials, which seems from Draytek's s
Hi,
I have a 16gb micro sd that's suddenly read only. Tried gparted etc. and
getting nowhere.
Anyone got any ideas?.
Cheers
Bryn
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Thank you Richard; I recall your earlier postings about laptop batteries
and have been in the habit of having mine on mains power only in actual
use - and set to take only 80% charge.
The problem here seems to have been resolved by this time leaving the
netbook charging overnight - my thinkin
Hi all
I know this is an old chetnut but I never did get it sorted when I asked
last... I'm having trouble accessing my nas devices through Ubuntu.
I have 3 devices. I tend to mount them as follows:
mount -t smbfs //ip/sharename /mnt/share -o user=rob
This seems to work for all
> The problem case was the Windows box being the central VPN
> Gateway/server and after a period of time connections would start
> failing.
Hmmm. I've not seen that happen - and I used to use PPTP a lot.
The biggest issues I used to see were ISPs dropping packets that I rather
wanted delivered..
> One of the support company's arguments for offering only PPTP was that
> our available bandwidth is too low to allow too many other machines to
> have VPN access.
If that is really their position[1], then you need to get some sort of SSh
server inside the network.
This allows you to get file-l
On Fri, 18 Nov 2011 10:14:46 +, James Courtier-Dutton wrote:
Maybe I did not make the set up clear.
The problem case was the Windows box being the central VPN
Gateway/server and after a period of time connections would start
failing.
No, it's my inability to be awake properly by half 10 in
On Fri, 18 Nov 2011 09:50:38 +, Gordon Scott wrote:
I'm not sure which model our router is, I'll check next time I'm in
the office (or maybe 'phone and ask), but it's definitely a Draytek
Vigor with WiFi and three aerials, which seems from Draytek's site to
suggest it already supports a numbe
On 18 November 2011 09:34, Chris Malton wrote:
> On Thu, 17 Nov 2011 18:37:46 +, James Courtier-Dutton wrote:
>>
>> I would recommend IPSEC but I have really bad experiences with
>> anything talking to the Windows implementation of IPSEC.
>> For example, Linux, Juniper, Cisco and most firewall
Hi Guys,
Thanks for all the feedback.
On 17/11/2011 18:37, James Courtier-Dutton wrote:
I would make sure the company put in a purpose built VPN gateway so
that people can connect with normal VPN clients, such as CISCO,
JUNIPER, Checkpoint etc.
There are very cheap VPN boxes out there from abou
On Thu, 17 Nov 2011 18:37:46 +, James Courtier-Dutton wrote:
I would recommend IPSEC but I have really bad experiences with
anything talking to the Windows implementation of IPSEC.
For example, Linux, Juniper, Cisco and most firewalls that support
IPSEC VPNs fail to work to a Windows machine.
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