The first thought that comes to mind is;
"Port Forwarding" (at the router, that is)
Is your router blocking 5900? ("Deny all, allow as required"?)
That's my $0.02 worth anyway.
Greetings from the Netherlands
-Colin
--
Colin J. Raven+> 1. I have 1-static IP address from the telephone +> company and I have 2 computers at home. so I bought a +> D-link 4-port router. I am able to connect both +> computers via the router and they are accessing the +> internet fine. +> 2. My staticIP is 65.68.xxx.xxx. And my private IPs +> for the computers are 192.168.0.101 and 192.168.0.100. +> 3. VNC is running on 192.168.0.101:0 (port 5900). +> Before the router, I was able to connect from work to +> my home machine by just doing 65.68.xxx.xxx:0 and it +> worked. +> 4. Now with the router, from work I can ping both +> 65.68.xxx.xxx and also 192.168.0.101. But when I do +> VNC, it can't find the vnc server. I have tried +> connecting to both 65.68.xxx.xxx:0 and also +> 192.168.0.101:0, but both fail. +> 5. In my router config, I logged on to the router +> (192.168.0.1) and added the port forwarding. In the +> router, I have, +> +> Name : VirtualServerVNC +> Private IP : 192.168.0.101 +> Protocol : TCP +> Private Port : 5900 +> Public Port : 5900 +> Schedule : Always Enabled +> +> I did the same for port 5800, just in case. But I +> am not able to access my home machine from work +> anymore. Even now I can access the home machine from +> work if I remove the router, so work network is not +> doing anything silly. It is my router that I need to +> configure or the VNC machine. +> _______________________________________________ VNC-List mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list
