you for all the definitions.  I’m keepingthis.

> On Jun 24, 2017, at 1:24 PM, Jonathan Cohn <jon.c.c...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I believe what you are asking is can a VPN provide the same level of access 
> to a Wirelesss Local network  as if you were you were able to communicate 
> with the hotspots at the remote location.
> 
> The simple answer is only if the remote location also has a VPN server that 
> you have VPN software for.
> 
> I am going to review a few networking terms below that might help you 
> understand. in the below definitions internet is in lower case unless it is 
> preceded by the word: "the" 
> 
> network: a group of computers that are connected together to allow them to 
> access each other.
> hub: a device to connect computers together in a network. Multiple hubs can 
> be connected together to create a larger network.
> switch: This is essentially a hub but has some more advanced software to 
> allow quicker communication between systems. Hub, switch, access point, hot 
> spot all essentially provide the same service at this level.
> internet: (with a lower case i) This is a group of at least two networks 
> connected together. 
> router: The device used to connect two networks together.
> client: a computer asking for a service on the network. This can be either at 
> the machine level or the software level. So you could call your Macintosh a 
> client or you could call Firefox a client. But Apache web server is not a 
> client.
> Server: What a client talks to to get information this can be local, or 
> remote. There are also cloud based servers which means that multiple machines 
> could serve a clients request equally well. 
> peer-to-peer: Sometimes there is no obvious client and server (bit torrent is 
> the best known protocol for this) so a server one minute could become a 
> client the next.
> 
> Now we get to VPN.
> VPN stands for Virtual Private Network, but these days that is not the only 
> function that VPN technology provides.
> A VPN can make either a computer or network behave as though it is part of 
> another network. 
> 
> The original use was lets say company My Toys has offices in Chicago, 
> Atlanta, and Sanfrancisco. Before  the internet to have these offices   
> communicate one would purchase two or three private digital connections 
> between the sites ab $500 to $1000. Now when the three sites connected to the 
> Internet it was realized that the offices could communicate with each other 
> over the Internet but there was no way to verify that nobody saw  that 
> communication. So on the routers if traffic was going from San Francisco to 
> Atlanta the router  connecting the Sanfancisco office to the Internet grabs 
> the data encrypts it and sends the results to the router connecting the 
> Atlanta office to the Internet.  rather than the destination. The Atlanta 
> router would then decrypt the information and send it to the final 
> destination within the Atlanta network. 
> 
> Now this technology is also used for:
> 1. Preventing snooping of traffic on insecure hotspots.
> 2. Pretending you are browsing the web from a different city then where you 
> really are.
> 3. Providing telephone and private server access for remote users.
> 
> 
> . 
> 
> HTH
> 
> Jonathan Cohn 
> 
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