In your message dated Fri, 27 Aug 2004 23:05:23 +0200, Vince said...
> i'm using both free and pro version of zonealarm, and have NO problem at all
> using vnc in server or client mode ! (WinXP Pro, ICS and the works)
Fantastic! How have you solved the problem of the ip address of hosts
getting o
EMAIL PROTECTED]
Onderwerp: RE: Finding a Remote IP
In your message dated Wed, 25 Aug 2004 09:27:15 +0200, David said...
> As they others said, a solution is to create a permanent DNS entry for the
> "other" computer. ...
Okay - there *might* just be a problem with this method if
In your message dated Wed, 25 Aug 2004 09:27:15 +0200, David said...
> As they others said, a solution is to create a permanent DNS entry for the
> "other" computer. ...
Okay - there *might* just be a problem with this method if you use a
firewall. I hope I'm wrong and it's easily solved :)
I us
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> on behalf of Kenton White[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> In your message dated Tue, 24 Aug 2004 10:29:08 -0500, Alex said...
>
> > Ronald,
> >
> > FYI - when replying using a client like Outlook Express, do a "Reply
> All" or
> > it doesn't go to
onnect over VNC ( or any
other protocol ) to that PC just using the address "johy5.dyndns.org"
( or whatever address you configured ).
Regards,
David
> --
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> on behalf of Marco Gabriel[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent:
?
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Kenton White
Sent: August 24, 2004 3:50 PM
To: RealVNC
Subject: Re: Finding a Remote IP
In your message dated Tue, 24 Aug 2004 10:29:08 -0500, Alex said...
> Ronald,
>
> FYI - when replying using
In your message dated Tue, 24 Aug 2004 10:29:08 -0500, Alex said...
> Ronald,
>
> FYI - when replying using a client like Outlook Express, do a "Reply All" or
> it doesn't go to the mailing list. ;)
That's excellent advice. However ALL of the other list servers I belong to
change the Reply-To ad
You can probably do this by typing "route" at a command-prompt in Windows
NT/2K/XP/2K3 and looking for the default gateway value of the dialup
connection.
Wez @ RealVNC Ltd.
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ronald Saa
> Sent: 24 Aug
Ronald,
FYI - when replying using a client like Outlook Express, do a "Reply All" or
it doesn't go to the mailing list. ;)
You need them to tell you the IP if you're going to connect to them. Dynamic
DNS as Arthur mentions is one way to accomplish this.
An alternative, if it is on-demand help and
hi
you can use a dynamic dns like dyndns.org to assign a dns entry to your
servers. on the server, you can run a small application that monitors
the connection state and updates the dns record. tools for updating the
dns records are also available at the dyndns site.
so you can always use yours
Here's a good way. Take a look at www.dyndns.org. By learning how to set
up a free dynamic DNS registry service, and installing a program that
updates your dyndns entry, such as Direct Update www.directupdate.net, you
can easily connect to YOURCOMPUTER.dyndns.org without worrying about IP
address
On RealVNC 4, you should see the IP if you hover the mouse over the VNC
server icon.
Alternate technique:
Assuming this is an NT-family operating system or Win98/Me, open a command
prompt window (Start | Run; type in "command" on Win98/Me, "cmd" on
NT/2000/XP/2003; hit "OK"). When it pops up, t
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