Re: [MacGroup] remote access problems

2008-04-05 Thread Jeff @ SLYN Systems
The Mac does not have a static IP address. My tech put it in manually. So unless the client changed it (which we have no reason to believe)... TY, Jeff Slyn, Owner SLYN Systems & Peripherals (502) 426-5469 a new & improved http://www.SLYNsystems.com coming soon serving Kentuckiana clients 7 days

Re: [MacGroup] remote access problems

2008-04-05 Thread Jeff @ SLYN Systems
Dear Brian, Lee & and Ed, Thanks ever so much for all 3 sets of ideas! You guys are great. Will get to work on each one and consult with my tech about them. Really appreciate it. Jeff Slyn, Owner SLYN Systems & Peripherals (502) 426-5469 a new & improved http://www.SLYNsystems.com coming soon ser

Re: [MacGroup] remote access problems

2008-04-05 Thread Brian ONeal
Sounds like you might be using dhcp and it has a new address. give the mac a static ip address. delete the pin holes and reconfigure and test again. Brian O'Neal On Apr 5, 2008, at 5:07 AM, Jeff @ SLYN Systems wrote: We have been attempting to create remote access to 2 macs that are behin

Re: [MacGroup] remote access problems

2008-04-05 Thread Lee Larson
Jeff @ SLYN Systems wrote: We have been attempting to create remote access to 2 macs that are behind a Netopia router employing Netopia's equivalent of port forwarding, know as Pinholes. We created a pinhole for port 548, one of the two ports that AFP is set up to use, (The other being 4

Re: [MacGroup] remote access problems

2008-04-05 Thread Ed Wiser
, 2008 1:08 AM To: macgroup@erdos.math.louisville.edu Subject: [MacGroup] remote access problems We have been attempting to create remote access to 2 macs that are behind a Netopia router employing Netopia's equivalent of port forwarding, know as Pinholes. We created a pinhole for port 548, o

[MacGroup] remote access problems

2008-04-05 Thread Jeff @ SLYN Systems
We have been attempting to create remote access to 2 macs that are behind a Netopia router employing Netopia's equivalent of port forwarding, know as Pinholes. We created a pinhole for port 548, one of the two ports that AFP is set up to use, (The other being 427). The remote Macbook at the cus

MacGroup: Remote access

2003-12-12 Thread Ed Wiser
rsday, December 11, 2003 5:40 PM To: macgroup at erdos.math.louisville.edu Subject: MacGroup: Remote access Thanks again, Lee and Jerry. I will have to find out how the router was set up; I guess that means I will have to get BellSouth to come out and do it. I certainly have no access to the router&

MacGroup: Remote access

2003-12-11 Thread Dan Crutcher
If I've been reading this thread correctly, it seems most likely that the problem is with the router on the work side of the equation, not with his own router. If that's the case, he would have to: 1. Give his work machine a static IP in the 198.162.xxx.xxx range. 2. Have the tech guy at work

MacGroup: Remote access

2003-12-11 Thread Lee Larson
On Dec 11, 2003, at 5:40 PM, Robert M. Klein wrote: > I will have to find out how the router was set up; I guess that means > I will > have to get BellSouth to come out and do it. I certainly have no > access to > the router's set up program. Am I missing something? Did BellSouth install your

MacGroup: Remote access

2003-12-11 Thread Robert M. Klein
Thanks again, Lee and Jerry. I will have to find out how the router was set up; I guess that means I will have to get BellSouth to come out and do it. I certainly have no access to the router's set up program. Am I missing something? Robert On 12/11/03 5:15 PM, "macgroup-digest" wrote: > The

MacGroup: Remote access

2003-12-11 Thread Jerry Yeager
To follow up on what Lee is saying and what you asked ... The software that is used to set up your router will most likely have an advanced option (I wish I could be more specific, but each router manufacturer handles this slightly differently, some use web-browser based set-ups and some use st

MacGroup: Remote access

2003-12-10 Thread Lee Larson
On Dec 10, 2003, at 6:27 PM, Robert M. Klein wrote: > Yes, Jerry, the IP address begins with 192 and there is a router in > our office (for the DSL). ?How do I set the router to forward requests > to port 548, pray tell? ?Is this something I can do or does the DSL > provider do it? The address

MacGroup: Remote access

2003-12-10 Thread Robert M. Klein
start over with MYOB or the like). :-0 Robert Date: Tue, 9 Dec 2003 18:43:21 -0500 From: Jerry Yeager <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: MacGroup: Remote Access A little more info will be needed to answer this one. Go to the file sharing preference pane of the machine you are trying to conn

MacGroup: Remote Access

2003-12-09 Thread Lee Larson
On Dec 9, 2003, at 5:26 PM, Robert M. Klein complained: > It doesn't work. I tried it just as you stated. Do I designate a > particular folder as sharing, also (I did)? Here's what's supposed to happen. When you enter the afp://your.machine.address and hit return, a dialog box will appear ask

MacGroup: Remote Access

2003-12-09 Thread Jerry Yeager
A little more info will be needed to answer this one. Go to the file sharing preference pane of the machine you are trying to connect to and look at the IP number it lists. If it starts with 192 (as in 192.xxx.xxx.xxx) or in 10 (as in 10.xxx.xxx.xxx) then you are living behind a router with NAT

MacGroup: Remote Access

2003-12-09 Thread Robert M. Klein
It doesn't work. I tried it just as you stated. Do I designate a particular folder as sharing, also (I did)? Robert On 12/8/03 5:15 PM, "macgroup-digest" emailed: >> Appleshare/IP is what you want, and you don't need any extra software. >> >> On the server, make sure you have personal fil

MacGroup: Remote Access

2003-12-07 Thread Robert M. Klein
Thanks, Lee (and Henri). I will try this tomorrow and see what happens. I tried connecting after reading your email but without having checked the firewall port setting before I left the server at the office, and it didn't work. (I did write down the server's IP address and used that.) Robert O

MacGroup: Remote Access

2003-12-06 Thread Lee Larson
On Dec 6, 2003, at 2:44 PM, Lee Larson wrote: > afp://the_client_machine_IP_address I mistyped a couple of messages ago. That should be (of course) afp://the_server_machine_IP_address | The next meeting of the Louisville Computer Society will | be January 27. The LCS Web page is

MacGroup: Remote Access

2003-12-06 Thread Lee Larson
On Dec 6, 2003, at 2:49 PM, Henri Yandell wrote: > Cool. How secure is this? Can the work firewall see etc? The password negotiation is encrypted, but the content is not. It's possible to tunnel everything through SSL, in order to get the whole thing strongly encrypted. I don't bother to do thi

MacGroup: Remote Access

2003-12-06 Thread Henri Yandell
Cool. How secure is this? Can the work firewall see etc? Not that I'll ever convince the company to buy me a Mac, but it's good to know. Hen On Sat, 6 Dec 2003, Lee Larson wrote: > On Dec 6, 2003, at 2:11 PM, Robert M. Klein wrote: > > > What I want to do is access the folder that I have alrea

MacGroup: Remote Access

2003-12-06 Thread Lee Larson
On Dec 6, 2003, at 2:11 PM, Robert M. Klein wrote: > What I want to do is access the folder that I have already set up for > file > sharing there from my computer at home or wherever via the > internet--copy > files, send files, etc. as if I were on the network there. Appleshare/IP is what you

MacGroup: Remote Access

2003-12-06 Thread Henri Yandell
The remote login bit is for SSH, though that might, with configuration, be able to include an SSH FTP server that would let you do the sharing you want. What you want to do is tricky to do in a non-command-line way with any form of security. The usual solution is to VPN in to your work and then t

MacGroup: Remote Access

2003-12-06 Thread Robert M. Klein
How do I use file sharing/remote access via the internet? On my Mac at work (OS 10.3.1), I went to "sharing" in system preferences and checked the box for remote login; personal file sharing was already checked, as I use that with my other Mac at work on the network. (Should I have checked remote

MacGroup: remote access to server

2003-03-19 Thread Jerry Yeager
Step one: Install OS-X on both machines (grin). The tricky part is finding the home machine out on the internet. She will need to know the IP address that is assigned to her home connection so that the dial-up machine can then find her home machine. Once she know that, then turn on the remote a

MacGroup: remote access to server

2003-03-19 Thread Beth Ernst
I have a friend who needs to setup a G4 running OS9 as a remote server. The server machine connects to the internet via a DSL line. She will need to access the server from her home on her G4 (also running OS 9) via a dial up connection. Can someone give me an overview of what needs to be done on