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| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
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Hi,
I randomly chose the domain below to find out my ISP's external IP address. We want to be able to have someone in Illinios connect to a desktop computer in my basement. The IP address first on the list is the internet address my router uses: 192.168.0.1 C:\Users\patricktraceRt microsoft.com Tracing route to microsoft.com [207.46.197.32] over a maximum of 30 hops: 1 1 ms 1 ms 1 ms 192.168.0.1 2 7 ms 7 ms 8 ms 10.89.0.1 3 14 ms 13 ms 12 ms d226-4-133.home.cgocable.net [24.226.4.133] 4 26 ms 27 ms 26 ms ra1ec-pos8-1.il.bigpipeinc.com [64.141.24.9] 5 26 ms 27 ms 27 ms rd1ec-ge6-0-0.il.shawcable.net [66.163.65.21] 6 39 ms 40 ms 39 ms rc2hu-ge2-0-0.ny.shawcable.net [66.163.76.237] .... snip ... I am assuming that my provider has 24.226.4.133 setup excluisivly for all people across the province of Ontario. Probably, the city I am in will have the following as the address of my house. I have two computers at my house, both connected to the Internert. d226-4-133.home.cgocable.net Why doesn't a URL like this work: http://d226-4-133.home.cgocable.net/8080 .... when I have the IIS service running on my home computer? |
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Patrick,
It doesn't work like that, something like this below should give you your external IP http://www.whatismyip.com/ Regards -- Olivier C |
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Thanks. I have full security on my LAN (Norton 360) so I'm going to tell my
Illinois friend to connect. What is better, Routing and Remote Access, or Terminal Services? "Olivier" wrote in message ... Patrick, It doesn't work like that, something like this below should give you your external IP http://www.whatismyip.com/ Regards -- Olivier C |
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Patrick,
Thanks. I have full security on my LAN (Norton 360) so I'm going to tell my Illinois friend to connect. What is better, Routing and Remote Access, or Terminal Services? Well, in fact it depends on what you want to do: HTTP server with IIS or Desktop sharing or something else... One detail, tough, you told us that your local network was made of two computers and a router... Your router have only one external IP address (given by your ISP) and one local IP (192.168.0.1) this means that you'll need to redirect the traffic that comes from the external IP to the IP of the computer you're willing to share (NAT forwarding) or redirect the traffic that comes from your external IP at a specific port on an Internal IP (one of your computer) and specific port (PAT forwarding). An alternative is to set your router DMZ IP to your computer, but this will redirect the whole external traffic on your computer and may be something dangerous if you don't fully understand what it means. Anyway, this has to be configured in your router, if it allows that... Once it is done/configured properly on your router, you may need to open the specific port(s) in your Norton360 firewall. BTW: I don't know what your cgocable router is able to do, I do not use those routers nor I do know cgocable ISP (I'm living in France). Regards -- Olivier C, France |
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I want to give Remote Desktop to a person in Illinios, using 2003 Server
(Terminal svcs) and LLTP. IIS service is not running on the server. TCP/IP port 3389 has been setup on the router. Thanks. "Olivier" wrote in message ... Patrick, Thanks. I have full security on my LAN (Norton 360) so I'm going to tell my Illinois friend to connect. What is better, Routing and Remote Access, or Terminal Services? Well, in fact it depends on what you want to do: HTTP server with IIS or Desktop sharing or something else... One detail, tough, you told us that your local network was made of two computers and a router... Your router have only one external IP address (given by your ISP) and one local IP (192.168.0.1) this means that you'll need to redirect the traffic that comes from the external IP to the IP of the computer you're willing to share (NAT forwarding) or redirect the traffic that comes from your external IP at a specific port on an Internal IP (one of your computer) and specific port (PAT forwarding). An alternative is to set your router DMZ IP to your computer, but this will redirect the whole external traffic on your computer and may be something dangerous if you don't fully understand what it means. Anyway, this has to be configured in your router, if it allows that... Once it is done/configured properly on your router, you may need to open the specific port(s) in your Norton360 firewall. BTW: I don't know what your cgocable router is able to do, I do not use those routers nor I do know cgocable ISP (I'm living in France). Regards -- Olivier C, France |
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Patrick Whittle wrote:
I want to give Remote Desktop to a person in Illinios, using 2003 Server (Terminal svcs) and LLTP. IIS service is not running on the server. TCP/IP port 3389 has been setup on the router. Thanks. "Olivier" wrote in message ... Patrick, Thanks. I have full security on my LAN (Norton 360) so I'm going to tell my Illinois friend to connect. What is better, Routing and Remote Access, or Terminal Services? Well, in fact it depends on what you want to do: HTTP server with IIS or Desktop sharing or something else... One detail, tough, you told us that your local network was made of two computers and a router... Your router have only one external IP address (given by your ISP) and one local IP (192.168.0.1) this means that you'll need to redirect the traffic that comes from the external IP to the IP of the computer you're willing to share (NAT forwarding) or redirect the traffic that comes from your external IP at a specific port on an Internal IP (one of your computer) and specific port (PAT forwarding). An alternative is to set your router DMZ IP to your computer, but this will redirect the whole external traffic on your computer and may be something dangerous if you don't fully understand what it means. Anyway, this has to be configured in your router, if it allows that... Once it is done/configured properly on your router, you may need to open the specific port(s) in your Norton360 firewall. BTW: I don't know what your cgocable router is able to do, I do not use those routers nor I do know cgocable ISP (I'm living in France). Regards -- Olivier C, France Okay, your router has given your two PCs in the basement an address, unless you set them manually. OPen a CMD prompt (Type CMD or whatever) and do IPCONFIG / all in the prompt window and do that on both. You router has 192.168.0.1 and forward the port to the IP you want your friend to be able to use. He can then simply use Remote Desktop connection together with your public IP address to connect, however this will likely kick you off the machine. There is another free solution though which allows you to share the screen. http://www.tightvnc.com/ is something you both download and you install it as a service on yours machine. You could put this in the other machine so your friend could see both with minimal trouble. He would install the same package but only need the "Viewer" and may not want to install the "Service". You would still have to forward a port on the router, it will tell you which when it installs. |
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