The campus will not permit ANY open ports on my computer there.

I do have a wireless network but it is low power and I cannot afford a
high power network, which unfortunately I will be more than 2 miles
away from where the web server computer will be located (probably like
7-10 miles away).

On Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 6:54 PM, Rob Landry <41001...@interpring.com> wrote:
>
>
> On Sat, 25 Feb 2012, Patrick Schmalstig / WRRJ Radio wrote:
>
>> SSH connections I fear would probably also not be permitted at my
>> college campus for fear they would think I'm either hacking a computer
>> or using another computer to bypass their proxy.
>
> If you can make outbound SSH connections from your campus, you can make a
> connection to your home machine that sets up a reverse SSH tunnel. For
> instance, you can make port 22 on your campus machine show up as port 1100
> on your home machine; then when your home machine wants to connect to the
> campus one it makes a connection to localhost port 1100.
>
> I've been using this technioque for several months now, and while there
> are pitfalls -- for instance, the need to reestablish the connection if
> something breaks it -- I find it answers quite well.
>
> If you can't make outbound SSH connections on port 22, set your home
> machine to accept SSH connections on port 443. That port is unlikely to be
> blocked because it's the standard port for https.
>
>
> Rob
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