Corporate VPN solutions very much frown upon allowing local access to
anything, even if you have local admin in windows (so much stuff is
policy driven) so the only real option is to password protect and open
up your lms to the Internet. Seems crazy to have to send traffic to the
office to come ba
Then Wonton's suggestion (post #10) is creative and could bring you the
web interface. And since you're home, it might be easy enough to
enable/disable the port forwarding rule on your gateway just for the
moments you need "remote" access to LMS.
4 SB 3 Libratone Zipp Mini iPeng (iPhone + i
Yes, I do control LMS stuff with my tablet, which of course is connected
to my home environment. Would be nice to just have it in a browser
window, since I am on a computer (albeit in a different domain)
altogether. And yes the VPN I use tunnels *everything* into the
corporate environment. Cisco A
Similar situation for me: the VPN takes all the nw traffic and I don't
want to fiddle on that part.
So I listen to my music using a SBRadio which is still connected to my
home nw, of course.
reinholdk's Profile: http://foru
It's not the most secure option, but you could forward port 9000 (tcp)
to the IP address of the LMS. Get your external IP address from
whatismyip.com then open yourIPaddress:9000 while VPN'd.
wonton's Profile: http://forum
Julf wrote:
> https://blog.lan-tech.ca/2013/02/21/access-local-and-vpn-network-simultaneously/
Yes yes split VPN. Thats all good but this is not what Pablolie
describes. He describes a full tunnel VPN.
Messing with the PC setup (adding an interface) might be frown upon,
messing with the VPN clie
banned for life wrote:
> That would depend on the VPN. Some VPN connections take ALL of the
> traffic down the road to the office while some allow for simultaneous
> connections to both networks... OpenVPN/PolarVPN provide simultaneous
> connections, for example, while the Windows VPN client does
Julf wrote:
> But you connect to the VPN through your home network? In that case you
> should be able to connect to any host on your home network too, you
> might just have to add a route (and a host entry if you want to use a
> host name instead of numeric IP address).
That would depend on the
epoch1970 wrote:
> Nowadays the "hide my ass/make me appear as being in another country"
> feature has made VPNs popular, so redirecting the default route has
> become a standard setup of VPN clients from which it can be surprisingly
> difficult to evade...)
Your PC still has to be able to reach
alnames wrote:
> Being in a similar situation, I just use my smartphone connected to my
> home network. I use OrangeSqueeze on my S5 but there are apps for
> Iphones as well.
I would say this is the sensible answer. After all if you're using a
dedicated work PC and a VPN that redirects the defau
Julf wrote:
> But you connect to the VPN through your home network? In that case you
> should be able to connect to any host on your home network too, you
> might just have to add a route (and a host entry if you want to use a
> host name instead of numeric IP address).
I dont understand his set
pablolie wrote:
> when I work from home I am connected to the corporate VPN. my LMS is of
> course set up on my home network. so when i am on my work computer, i
> need to switch to the home computer every time i want to control LMS.
But you connect to the VPN through your home network? In that
Being in a similar situation, I just use my smartphone connected to my
home network. I use OrangeSqueeze on my S5 but there are apps for
Iphones as well.
alnames's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=63
I just wonder if anyone has a more elegant solution -
when I work from home I am connected to the corporate VPN. my LMS is of
course set up on my home network. so when i am on my work computer, i
need to switch to the home computer every time i want to control LMS. i
was wondering whether there's
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