Will:
Heya. Yes, your Linksys router is a NAT'ing router, and
you'll need to setup port-forwarding on it to access a VNC Server
that's behind it. Details of that here:
http://www.portforward.com/english/routers/port_forwarding/Linksys/BEFSR41-v3-v4-v5/VNC.htm
Once you're done making those adjust, you can test them
by opening a webpage to www.GoToMyVNC.com and running the scan
there.
As for getting the "true internet-routable IP", your Linksys
router (if it's a new one) probably has a "dynamic DNS" client built
into it. Just need to get that setup. One VNC users account of that
process is here:
http://faq.gotomyvnc.com/fom-serve/cache/127.html
Hope that helps!
-Scott
As per suggestions from this list, I have completely disable ZoneAlarm,
and made sure the Windows Firewall in Control Panel is disabled.
Thanks for the suggestions, but still no go.
Is the Linksys router the same problem as with NAT router?
When I ping the ip address of either of my two computers that
sit behind my Linksys router, the ping is unsuccessful. Does that mean
I do not have a true "internet-routable IP" identified for the VNC to
access for either of these two Linksys'd computers? If not,
how do I determine true "internet-routable IP's"?
thxs in advance,
Will
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