I opened 50900-51200. Seems to work OK on tiger.
This works nicely for keeping in sync with my collaborative writer down the
hall.
-- Original message --
From: "Adam R. Maxwell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>You could try opening a range of ports. On Leopard it seems to
On Jul 29, 2008, at 7:27 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am still using Tiger. Does this mean I cannot use this feature
without upgrading?
You could try opening a range of ports. On Leopard it seems to be
using ports > 5 (51122 and 51123). Launch BibDesk on Tiger, then
run `lsof |gr
AFAIK, that's unfortunately correct.
Christiaan
On 29 Jul 2008, at 4:27 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I am still using Tiger. Does this mean I cannot use this feature
> without upgrading?
>
> -- Original message --
> From: Christiaan Hofman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
I am still using Tiger. Does this mean I cannot use this feature without
upgrading?
-- Original message --
From: Christiaan Hofman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> BibDesk does not use a fixed port for sharing. On Leopard you should
> be able to open the (Apple) firewall
BibDesk does not use a fixed port for sharing. On Leopard you should
be able to open the (Apple) firewall for BibDesk, as it is signed.
Christiaan
On 29 Jul 2008, at 3:26 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I can share bibdesk data over our local network if I turn off the
> firewall. I have loo
I can share bibdesk data over our local network if I turn off the firewall. I
have looked in vain for the ports to open to allow sharing with the firewall
turned on.
Are there ports to be opened for this?
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