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#41
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Peter Duniho wrote:
[snip] I think "ir" should be "it"? Correct. [excellent info Rmt Desktop snipped] Depending on the routers (might have to reconfig a bit) at home and the hotel, you could set up a VPN (Virtual Private Network) between the two, and further restrict access from undesirables by allowing only certain IPs in (that way, only the hotel and house could talk.) A lot of routers have hardware VPN capability and you can also do it in software, but it gets more complicated. You could sent it up so it works both ways, you could remote into your office PC at the hotel from home using Rmt Desktop and work from home. One thing to note about Remote Desktop - Windows XP Home only can be a remote not a host. It takes WinXP Pro to be the host. So if you have Pro on both ends, you are good to go, if not, options exist. I use Remote Desktop very reliably and with very good response from home to work - over a 256K (both up and down) DSL line. Almost as good as sitting at my desk. Since the cable modem bottle neck Peter mentioned would be at the hotel end, it shouldn't affect you much accessing the home PC from work. The remote (hotel) machine only has to send keyboard and mouse commands; since you are actually "working" on the host PC, unless you transfer a file from remote to host, there is not much overhead in the remote to host direction. What will use the most bandwidth is home PC (host) sending the screens to the remote. There are some performance parameters in Rmt Desktop that you can set to customize the connection, also. I would disable remote printers and themes (backgrounds) but leave "send sounds to the remote computer" enabled. Randy |
#42
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"Jose" wrote in message
... I sometimes compose in Notepad, saving to a temp directory every now and then, if it's a long post. Then C&P into whatever I'm posting with. Nawh... 'vi' Rules !!!... |
#43
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"Randy Aldous" wrote in message
oups.com... [...] Since the cable modem bottle neck Peter mentioned would be at the hotel end, it shouldn't affect you much accessing the home PC from work. Actually, unless I've recalled incorrectly, Jay has Mediacom's cable modem at home, and Qwest DSL at the hotel. So the 128Kbps bottleneck is significant. Which is not to say it would prevent Remote Desktop from working. I have use it with a dial-up connection, and while sluggish and somewhat limited in terms of what's practical, it still works. Going through a cable modem upload limit will be noticeable, but should not actually preclude the use of Remote Desktop. All that said, assuming Jay can get to his Mediacom news account from the hotel, IMHO the best solution is to put his news data files on a USB drive and take that back and forth. That would provide the best performance, without any synchronization issues. The setup is non-trivial, but then so would Remote Desktop. As much as I dislike web interfaces to email and news, I have to admit they have one good thing going for them: they are trivially easy to use (or at least can and should be). Pete |
#44
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Nawh... 'vi' Rules !!!...
Over TECO? Jose -- "Never trust anything that can think for itself, if you can't see where it keeps its brain." (chapter 10 of book 3 - Harry Potter). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#45
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![]() "Jose" wrote in message t... Nawh... 'vi' Rules !!!... Over TECO? Jose -- "Never trust anything that can think for itself, if you can't see where it keeps its brain." (chapter 10 of book 3 - Harry Potter). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. TECO= Type Every Character Over Haven't used it in 20 years... John |
#46
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"Jose" wrote in message
t... Over TECO? What can I say? I got spoiled by UNIX... I especially liked 'vi' over 'ed', although I still use 'sed' for certain things that are easier with it... Emacs was nice, but 'vi' was something that you could guarantee would be on every UNIX machine... There might be better editors for a particular flavor of UNIX, but why should you learn 20 different editors when 'vi' was there? I stull use 'vi' today, whether I'm on a UNIX flavor box or on a PC... TECO is still available if you want it though... For free, no less... http://almy.us/teco.html |
#47
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![]() "Randy Aldous" wrote Yep. Just got it twice in a row. I've taken to copying my text to the clipboard before hitting the "Post" button... Also been happening just opening up Google Groups - to the page with all my subscribed groups (before anyone says something about using Google, the firewall I am behind, which I have no control over, blocks NNTP traffic, so HTTP is it. :-) ) I don't do anything special, until I get a failure, then I go to "sent items", and copy the whole message. Then, I go back to the message I was replying to, hit reply again, delete everything and replace (paste) with my copied message. Not too hard. g -- Jim in NC |
#48
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On Fri, 3 Nov 2006 23:45:31 -0500, "Morgans"
wrote: "Randy Aldous" wrote Yep. Just got it twice in a row. I've taken to copying my text to the clipboard before hitting the "Post" button... Also been happening just opening up Google Groups - to the page with all my subscribed groups (before anyone says something about using Google, the firewall I am behind, which I have no control over, blocks NNTP traffic, so HTTP is it. :-) ) I don't do anything special, until I get a failure, then I go to "sent items", and copy the whole message. Then, I go back to the message I was replying to, hit reply again, delete everything and replace (paste) with my copied message. Not too hard. g There actually are people left who post and read news groups ON google? It wasn't too bad before Google took over, but it sure went down hill in a hurry afterwards. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#49
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"Roger (K8RI)" wrote:
On Fri, 3 Nov 2006 23:45:31 -0500, "Morgans" wrote: "Randy Aldous" wrote Yep. Just got it twice in a row. I've taken to copying my text to the clipboard before hitting the "Post" button... Also been happening just opening up Google Groups - to the page with all my subscribed groups (before anyone says something about using Google, the firewall I am behind, which I have no control over, blocks NNTP traffic, so HTTP is it. :-) ) I don't do anything special, until I get a failure, then I go to "sent items", and copy the whole message. Then, I go back to the message I was replying to, hit reply again, delete everything and replace (paste) with my copied message. Not too hard. g There actually are people left who post and read news groups ON google? It wasn't too bad before Google took over, but it sure went down hill in a hurry afterwards. Took over what? Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com -- Don Poitras |
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