Thanks Mark and Alex!

I was afraid of that :-)

In my environment, school district, by default the MS firewall is turned on. We 
could provide info to a teacher how to temporarily turn off the firewall. Even 
if they forgot to turn it back on, they still be covered within the district 
network. But if they went to the local coffee shop and forgot to turn it on 
they may be vulnerable.

There are more ways to download a file, however to upload and add to an file on 
a server(say an XML data file)I'm not too familiar with a strategy that would 
work to upload the file.

The file would need to be used by multiple clients, however, each one would at 
times update the data file. I know mySQL db might be a possile solution but 
that increases the level of difficulty....or at least I think it does, ...who 
knows after the trouble I had with an ftp upload :-)

Good learning experience though!

Thanks!


Message: 19
Date: Fri, 24 Mar 2006 08:50:41 +0000
From: Alex Tweedly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Ftp and cross platform issues...
To: How to use Revolution <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

Mark Wieder wrote:

>John-
>
>Thursday, March 23, 2006, 11:36:57 AM, you wrote:
>
>  
>
>>My new question is what Firewall exception needs to be entered in
>>the built in WindowsXP Firewall software to make the FTP stack work,
>>without having to turn the built in Windows Firewall completly off?
>>    
>>
>
>Well, my opinion, take it or leave it, is that there's no excuse for
>having the builtin firewall turned on.
>
"No excuse" ?
What would you do with a laptop that sometimes gets used on public
networks (e.g. Internet cafes, public wifi nets, etc.)?

I keep Win-XP Firewall on most of the time, and disable it temporarily
when I have a problem and if it is safe to do so. If I have (e.g. Rev
FTP problems) while using an unsafe network, I find another way to do it.

(Plea - auto-updating stacks *should* provide a way to download the
update to somewhere local and up date from there, please. Not only does
it help with this problem, but also helps if you have multiple machines
and a slow network connection - e.g. when your DSL is down, and you are
using your fall-back dial-up connection).

>That's one of the first things
>I check for when I'm troubleshooting a system with network problems.
>If your computer is otherwise unprotected on a broadband connection
>then I think you're better off with a hardware solution - go spend a
>few bucks and get thee behind a router, then configure the firewall
>that's built into it.
>
>  
>
I generally agree - but I do think there are some circumstances where a
built-in firewall is required.


-- 
Alex Tweedly       http://www.tweedly.net

-------------- next part --------------
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.385 / Virus Database: 268.2.6/286 - Release Date: 20/03/2006 
_______________________________________________
use-revolution mailing list
[email protected]
Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription 
preferences:
http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution

Reply via email to