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Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
LOL ;)
Thats exactly what I described a little earlier only sir John suggested no need for vpn which is quite right however, you then need to consider nat port forwarding which ultimately is not as secure as an 'on demand' dial up vpn. Read my earlier post again . . slowly :-) Andy is also right on with Logmein although I believe there is usually a charge asociated . . . |
Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
Cheers for that Andy will check it, and will it let me download movies etc.. from my home pc where my 20mb is @20 mb and then I can view it when downloaded on my laptop at my parents house...using logmein....
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Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
At your parents house, the maximum speed you will be able to download at is either the upload speed of your VM account or the download speed of your parents internet connection, whichever is slowest. (well, you may gain a little bit if you use LZO compression on the VPN link, but not much).
If you remotely control your home machine from your parents house (VNC, RDP, xterm etc.), it will still get the 20Mbit service although it may become a bit unusable if you don't have QoS properly set up. |
Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
Cheers Patriot
You have been helpful did not mean do diss your earlier idea it jjust sounded pretty technical for a novice like me but i think I could get my head round remote access program like log me in as long as it does th job. But thanks everyone for your help you have been very patient cheers |
Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
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768kb I would guess is unlikely to be sufficient to view a movie or TV programme in real time. |
Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
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---------- Post added at 21:48 ---------- Previous post was at 21:42 ---------- Cheers Chris I don't know its like one step forward and two steps back aint it. I did not realise that remote viewing wouyld mean using meaning uploading just 768kb I just figuered that i can view my slingbox from my house on my parents laptop quite comfortbaly at 400kb so I figured a movie thats already been downloaded would not be a problem ---------- Post added at 22:04 ---------- Previous post was at 21:48 ---------- Cheers Andy I have had a look at logmein but it does not support video playback so if I downloaded a video remotely, I would not be able to view it on my parents laptop, unless I converted it to Windows display which i did not understand |
Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
It all depends on the bitrate of the downloaded movie a lower quality file would be more likely to be viewable over a limited connection; a ripped HD TV programme certainly wouldn't be.
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Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
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Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
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Why would you even try and do it that way? |
Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
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In this case, if you are remote controlling a machine that is downloading heavily, then the download process may swallow up a lot of upstream bandwidth and without traffic shaping, the machine you are viewing it from will have difficulty being able to talk to it at any speed. (as network traffic queues up to leave your home machine at your modem). You will not be able to view video content like this. (well, not really). |
Re: Virgin media broadband over VPN
For the specific case of wanting to watch video at your parents' home that is stored at your own home, remote desktop programs are completely inappropriate (especially VNC, which is always inappropriate over the public internet as it has no encryption). I would recommend using something designed for the job, like VLC, to stream the video from your home PC because it can transcode the video into a lower bitrate. You will still need remote desktop software to set up the stream, for which you'll need a little patience if you're using VLC, so make sure you use something with encryption - or of course tunnel VNC through SSH.
With the right software, a little knowledge and a fair bit of patience you can come up with a completely free point and click system. VLC, SSH and VNC are all quite complex but there's tons of information about them - Google is your friend! Sam (who misses his Mac something awful but realises he's still fairly comfortable with Linux, even after all this time) ---------- Post added at 14:01 ---------- Previous post was at 13:56 ---------- Ohhh, you have a Slingbox? If your home computer has a TV output, and your Slingbox has a free input, then just connect them up and you'll be away! No faffing around with VLC, etc... Sam |
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