James, If your VOIP adapter is assigning an internal IP to your computer, then it's also a router. If that's the case, there must be a web control panel of some sort for the adapter. DMZ is not important, but port forwarding is. You will need to find out how to access the web control panel of the VOIP box in order to be able to configure it to allow VNC sessions. If you happen to find where to setup port forwarding, take a look at this page: http://www.realvnc.com/support/portforward.html
Until you figure that part out, there's not much any of us can do to help you out, I'm afraid. Not any way that I can think of anyways. Cheers, Arthur ________________________________ I've stopped 66,930 spam and fraud messages. You can too! Free trial of spam and fraud protection at http://www.cloudmark.com/sig/?rc=f9r9z -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of James C. Barr Sent: Saturday, June 17, 2006 1:29 AM To: [email protected] Subject: VNC through VOIP box Here is the situation. I have installed VNC server on my machine. I am running through a VOIP box that clones my MAC address. My machine is then given the 192.168 unroutable IP address. The VOIP box grabs an IP from my ISP. My VOIP box does allow me to set up DMZ on it but I am not familiar with how to do so. How would I go about setting this up so that people external to me can connect to my VNC server session? If you need more information let me know and I will try to provide it. -- JC Barr CIN Bengals GM HOU Gamblers GM RICH Riders GM BLAK Kolts GM GAL Texans GM STS Steeds GM _______________________________________________ VNC-List mailing list [email protected] To remove yourself from the list visit: http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list _______________________________________________ VNC-List mailing list [email protected] To remove yourself from the list visit: http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list
