Michael P. Studebaker, Ogden, Utah -----



Similar documents
UltraVNC, available from is what I use; works terrifically well. There's also

Remote Access. David Caesar-Dare & Deb Meisels with special thanks to Jimmy Lamake

Using WebVPN (webvpn.childrens.harvard.edu) to access shared and P drives, access , and use Remote Desktop

Remote Amateur Radio. A Beginner's Guide to Remote Amateur Radio From a Beginner. Eric Huoppi KB1KMF

Instructions for transferring the SINUMERIK HMI to an external screen

Any of you out there have any input on this topic: the use of Macs in their practice?

Viking VPN Guide Mac OSX RDP Usage

GEM Network Advantages and Disadvantages for Stand-Alone PC

WorldExtend IronDoor 3.5 Publishing a Terminal Services Application

Accessing your Staff (N and O drive) files from off campus

Welcome To VIRTUAL WITHOUT THE VIRTUAL TM. imvp Setup Guide for Windows. imvp with RDP Lab Setup Guide For Windows 1

Using Virtual Machines

Installation Overview

How to Use? SKALICLOUD DEMO

The initial set up takes a few steps, but then each time you want to connect it is just a two set process.

VNC User Guide. Version 5.0. June 2012

Audit4 Installation Requirements

Guide to Setting up Internet Connection Sharing for Windows

1. Installation Overview

For the purpose of setting up a home network, all you need to worry about are two major categories of components:

MyUSBOnly User Guide Menu

Daylite Server Admin Guide (Dec 09, 2011)

How do I start a meeting?

Using Remote Desktop Software with the LAN-Cell 3

Student Home

Network Service List. Network Service List

Enterprise Remote Control 5.6 Manual

Community Broadband. What is it? What is involved? How much does it cost? What to do next? Common Questions

SmartCode. v5.0. VNC Manager. Award Winning Remote Computer Management Software. Powerful tool to control all your computers from one program

Terminal Server Guide

Projetex 9 Workstation Setup Quick Start Guide 2012 Advanced International Translations

How to make a VPN connection to our servers from Windows 7

Virtual Private Network (VPN)

How to make a VPN connection to our servers from Windows 8

VPN: Virtual Private Network Setup Instructions

USING GENIE REMOTELY

You must download the desktop client before you start, this is found on the Yuuguu page on your Ezereach web portal.

Transcription. Crashplan vs Backblaze. Which service should you pick the short version

REMOTE ACCESS SERVICE SUPPORT. ICR User Support Guide

General Questions Requesting Access Client Support Downloading Issues Installation Issues Connectivity Issues...

Internet and Intranet Calling with Polycom PVX 8.0.1

Configuration Manual English version

Magaya Software Installation Guide

networking revision B

TNC is an open architecture for network access control. If you re not sure what NAC is, we ll cover that in a second. For now, the main point here is

Remote Access for the NCSU Virtual Computing Lab Robert E. Young

Connecting to the Staff Desktop Service

QBalance.com. We make QuickBooks work for you. Call Toll-Free: (800) Congratulations! You are using the best accounting software available!

MED ACCESS USER INSTRUCTIONS FOR INSTALLING THE CITRIX RECEIVER FOR ACCESS TO ALBERTA NETCARE VIA PLB

NEW AND IMPROVED! INSTALLING an IRC Server (Internet Relay Chat) on your WRT54G,GS,GL Version 1.02 April 2 nd, Rusty Haddock/AE5AE

How To Remotely View Your Security Cameras Through An Ezwatch Pro Dvr/Camera Server On A Pc Or Ipod (For A Small Charge) On A Network (For An Extra $20) On Your Computer Or Ipo (For Free

VNC User Guide. Version 5.3. December 2015

Perimeter Firewalls. Brandon Napier Rick Archibald Pete Jamison HAL PC & HLUG 09/22/2007. brought to you by: in association with

31 Ways To Make Your Computer System More Secure

Campus VPN. Version 1.0 September 22, 2008

Chapter 6 Configuring the SSL VPN Tunnel Client and Port Forwarding

How to use

Automation Engine 14. Troubleshooting

How to set up a router to share you broadband connection

What is VNC. VNC Solutions and Related. What VNC Solutions are available. Defining some terms

Pocket PC. running Windows 2000 Server.

FAQ. How does the new Big Bend Backup (powered by Keepit) work?

Quick Start Guide. RV 120W Wireless-N VPN Firewall. Cisco Small Business

SETTING UP AN INSTANT MESSAGING SERVER

How to Remotely View Security Cameras Using the Internet

Minimum Software and Hardware Requirements

Securing Remote Desktop for Windows XP

Remote Desktop How-To. How to log into your computer remotely using Windows XP, etc.

Instructions for use the VPN at the Warsaw School of Economics

3M Occupational Health and Environmental Safety 3M E-A-Rfit Validation System. Version 4.2 Software Installation Guide (Upgrade) 1 P age

Deploying BitDefender Client Security and BitDefender Windows Server Solutions

INUVIKA OPEN VIRTUAL DESKTOP FOUNDATION SERVER

Mac OS X: INSTALLING TUNNELBLICK

Yale Software Library

Hosted SharePoint: Questions every provider should answer

Gain the cloud advantage. Cloud computing explained Decide if the cloud is right for you See how to get started in the cloud

RemotelyAnywhere Getting Started Guide

SysAidTM Product Description

NETWORK SET UP GUIDE FOR

LogMeIn Hamachi. Getting Started Guide

Mapping Your Path to the Cloud. A Guide to Getting your Dental Practice Set to Transition to Cloud-Based Practice Management Software.

MacroLan Azure cloud tutorial.

FileMaker Pro 12. Using a Remote Desktop Connection with FileMaker Pro 12

VPN Configuration Guide. Parallels Remote Desktop for Mac

How To Create A Virtual Private Cloud On Amazon.Com

GoToMyPC and. pcanywhere. expertcity.com. Remote-Access Technologies: A Comparison of

LogMeIn Backup. Getting Started Guide

Enabling VPN on your VPS

FileMaker Pro 11. Running FileMaker Pro 11 on Terminal Services

Transcription:

OK, what is the best way of accessing the office computer from home. We finally have DSL at home, and it would be nice to not have to sit in the office all night when I can work from home. Michael P. Studebaker, Ogden, Utah If the office computer is Windows XP Professional, use Remote Desktop Protocol. If it is Windows XP Home, you can use GoToMyPC, pcanywhere, or RealVNC. I use UltraVNC (Virtual Network Computer) myself: http://ultravnc.sourceforge.net/ Another open source alternative is TightVNC: http://www.tightvnc.com/ We use gotomypc.com and are very happy with it. Havona Madama, New York, New York GoToMyPC is the best I have ever used. David Zachary Kaufman I am not a computer guy, but my guy did set up the remote desktop that comes with XP. It is great and never gives me a problem. Robert W. "Robby" Hughes, Jr., Stone Mountain, Georgia I have been very happy with GoToMyPC.com.

What do you need on the client side to make this work? Can you get into it from a Mac or older pc? Or do both machines need XP? Jake London I am not so smart about these things, but I think all you need to do is activate the capability on the office machine and input the IP address on your remote machine. I could be way off on this assessment. Robert W. "Robby" Hughes, Jr., Stone Mountain, Georgia "Where" are you going to work? I find it fastest to transfer files from one machine to the other and actually work on that machine. if you're going to do that, Pcanywhere is marvelous. if you're going to work remotely, Gotomypc lets you log in and work at the machine. a side benefit is that you can use it from any machine -- i.e. if you travel without a notebook. it's simple to set up. I think they have monthly prices (cheaper by subscription)-- why don't you try it for a month Jay S. Goldenberg, Chicago, Illinois The remote machine can be any Windows based machine. There is a free client that is downloaded from Microsoft and installed on the remote machine. I don't know if there is a Mac client, but I doubt it. http://www.logmein.comhttp://www.gotomypc.com Other options are software (Laplink/PC Anywhere) or VPN. Darrell W. Stewart, San Antonio, Texas I use LogMeIn.com. Sufficient for my needs. Both LogMeIn and GoToMyPC offer free 30 day trials; sign up for both, and figure out which works better for you. GTMPC is more expensive. Barry L. Lippitt., Southfield, Michigan No problem to access a terminal through a server? Craig McLaughlin, Irvine, California

No idea. I just use it to connect my laptop to my desktop. Barry L. Lippitt., Southfield, Michigan If the computer at work is XPP and it has a static IP address, then the computer at home can either be a Mac (with OSX) or a Winbox (with XP). If the computer at work is a Mac, then you'll need a different program such as Timbuktu from Netopia. David L. Leon, Dallas, Texas I use PC Anywhere from Norton. My computer at home is Windows 98 and the office is XP. (Pent 4 and 1 GB Ram) Worked great, that is before I fried the motherboard on the office machine (whole nother story) When the office ran on Windows 98 (Pent III and 663 Ram) not so good - used too many resources. Mark Olberding, Iowa I use GoToMyPC.com. Works great & comes in handy. Just this week I ran to Court to file a subpoena and walked out of my office without the NPD I had done. Court won't issue the subpoena without it, so I went to Kinko's (a block away from Court), logged into my computer and printed out a fresh copy of the NPD, made copies and ran back over to Court. A life saver in this instance since it's about a 20-30 minute trip each way between my office and Court. I've also used it to access my computers when I went to DC last year and on a trip back to MI this year. Jane E. Tate, Kailua, Hawaii Just FYI, the same exact thing can be done with UltraVNC for free (i.e., accessing your home computer from any Java-enabled Web browser). Do you have any comments on the relative ease and security of the do-it-yourself setup? I have played around with one of the VNC derivatives on a LAN and it seemed to work nicely, but I have stuck with GoToMyPC for real work because the VNC setup struck me as somewhat fragile, especially if it needs to run in an environment where the host PC has a dynamic IP address and is sitting behind a consumer-grade NAT/firewall device. It would be neat to stop paying GTMP $30 a month, but I would rather pay $30 a month for something that always (in my experience) works, rather than $0 per month for something that works sometimes and not at other times.

The dynamic IP address issue can be handled by using something like http://www.dyndns.com or http://noip.com. The firewall issue is handled by forwarding the appropriate ports, which any remote control software will need to do. And the whole thing can be encrypted via a plugin. The only time I have known UltraVNC to fail is when the server computer is offline. But you don't have to take my word for it: you can always install the thing right alongside GoToMyPC and try it out yourself. I'm not trying to be argumentative and say that GTMP is better than UltraVNC - just wanted to know if you have the same needs that I have and feel that UVNC meets them, or if we have different needs, so the fact that UVNC meets yours doesn't mean it'll meet mine. The problem with trying it out in parallel is that the sort of failures I'm concerned about are difficult to test for - my biggest concerns are (a) unavailability at a crucial time, and (b) that the software has weaknesses that, when exposed through an open firewall port, mean that bad people can take control of or disable my PC. The first concern seems to argue against any free service - free services tends to be operated by volunteer/enthusiast people, who are prone to upgrade/change software to match their ideas about technical correctness/superiority, even where they don't match my ideas about stability at crucial moments; and who are also prone to stop providing service suddenly, and/or view unavailability/incompatibility as an unfortunate side effect, rather than a direct threat to their ability to feed their families. If UVNC's NAT-to-NAT repeater is suddenly unavailable to me, there's not much I can do to the UVNC guys. If the GTMP service goes down, I'm going to think about not subscribing any more, which (at a macro level) means the operators need to think about getting new jobs if they do that very much. To address the second concern (software quality/security), I guess I could set up a sacrificial PC on its own little network and watch to see if it gets hijacked, but that's a lot of effort to save $30/month, and the underlying methodology is somewhat suspect, anyway. Anyway, like I said, I am not trying to make a GTMP=good, UVNC=bad argument, just hoping to draw out some details about other people's needs and solutions to see if there's a better way to be doing things. Apples and oranges. VNC is a direct connection between the remote and the host computers. As I understand it, GTMP works through a server. Yes, VNC has to have a port forwarded to the host computer, but so does GTMP, which I believe works on Port 80, but I could be wrong. GTMP has the potential to be unavailable more often than VNC because the in-between server could be down. If you like the idea of GTMP, use it. Several people here are happy with it. I'm somewhat technically inclined, and I have no intentions of paying $30 per month for a function that I can get for free. (My teenage daughter says I'm frugal --- I say I'm cheap.) Moreover, at $30 per month, you could upgrade to a full version of XP Pro with a 5 or 6 month payback and have Remote Desktop Protocol, which is faster than all of the options mentioned in this thread.

Your mileage may vary.