As will be clear by now, we have for the first time over-subscribed a
UKNOF venue ! Thank you all for your support and interest, and apologies
to those of you we've had to keep waiting to confirm a place or have had
to turn away.
For those of you who RSVPed to our sponsors, there is at least one
p
On 18 Jan 2012, at 16:44, Keith Mitchell wrote:
> As usual, and for those of you who were not able to come, we will be
> webcasting the event, at:
>
> http://uknof.bogons.net/uknof21.html
Argh!!
I wanted to watch Dave Taht's presentation but the web cast is on an unusual
port so is bloc
On Thu, 19 Jan 2012, Ray Bellis wrote:
Argh!! I wanted to watch Dave Taht's presentation but the web cast is on
an unusual port so is blocked by the egress rules on our firewall :(
I had a chat with Dave earlier and it sounds really interesting but stuck
on train so missing it live.
VPN?
> I had a chat with Dave earlier and it sounds really interesting but stuck on
> train so missing it live.
>
> VPN?
Yes, I'm in via a remote SOCKS proxy now.
Ray
On 19 Jan 2012, at 13:54, Ray Bellis wrote:
>> http://uknof.bogons.net/uknof21.html
> Argh!!
> I wanted to watch Dave Taht's presentation but the web cast is on an unusual
> port so is blocked by the egress rules on our firewall :(
It's RTMP on tcp/1935? Is that unusual?
It sounds like you
On 19 Jan 2012, at 14:31, Will Hargrave wrote:
It's RTMP on tcp/1935? Is that unusual?
It sounds like your firewall is broken. ;)
It works perfectly - firewall rules that only permit egress of specific
protocols are hardly uncommon.
It seems that tcp/1935 is uncommon enough that no-one asked
lists.uknof.org.uk>>
Subject: Re: [uknof] UKNOF21 Final Information
On 19 Jan 2012, at 14:31, Will Hargrave wrote:
It's RTMP on tcp/1935? Is that unusual?
It sounds like your firewall is broken. ;)
It works perfectly - firewall rules that only permit egress of specific
protocols
On Thu, 19 Jan 2012, Ray Bellis wrote:
> It seems that tcp/1935 is uncommon enough that no-one asked for it to be
> added to the list of permitted ports before.
Used by BBC news video clips, so really quite common...
Then again, the BBC may fall back to other methods if 1935 fails.