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The server computer is connected to a network switch, router and a DSL modem with an static address (router and switch are AirLink). The remote computer is conected to the internet with an ISP (and later I will connect this remote to a modem with a dynamic address in DSL).
I already connected them directly through the telephone lines using PcA and it worked. I also connected them to the network switch with PcA with the TCP/IP host address and it works.
But when I set the remote through an ISP connection it seems that the router is refusing the connection.
Help me stating information required and where to input it.
I would greatly appreciate clear and precise steps, I am not an expert but would like to learn to do it by myself. Thanks in advance.

2007-10-08 21:28:33 · 3 answers · asked by Juan 2 in Computers & Internet Computer Networking

3 answers

First of all :

1. Your remote must use Public IP
2. If you use Private then do ip forwarding / port forwarding

Then

1. Make sure remote is Static Ip or Dynamic Ip
2. If Dynamic it`ll be trouble , you must see the ip first everytime it changed

Then
1. if all ok then do ping on remote host , is it reply ?
2. It cant be standard cause sometimes ICMP is firewalled

Then

1.. check firewall , pc anywhere 10 use TCP 5631 and UDP 5632
2. Open the port if it blocked

Alternative

if you`r using Win Xp , then you can use Remote Desktop as alternative. Win Xp use port 3389.

2007-10-08 21:40:45 · answer #1 · answered by kirlein 2 · 1 0

between the copies of xp has to have a various reproduction of xp not the comparable one because of the fact the different laptop reason it has somethng interior this gadget that detects and could not artwork. to conect laptop to laptop purely no information superhighway you prefer a go over cat5 cable and a community card in each and each laptop now if information superhighway with dialup then the two might could have a modem yet purely one laptop could get entry to the information superhighway yet you may pull report from the different laptop or keep data to the at laptop and of direction the community enjoying cards and the cat5 go over cable now the final one DSL 2 community enjoying cards 2 cat5 cables a 4 port 10/a hundred port community router/modem or only router then a million extra cat5 cable to hook to the DSL modem and then the telephone cord ant electrical energy and likely the two computers would nicely be on line

2016-10-06 08:53:22 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Your routers firewall is stopping the connection through the internet, and thats exactly whats its designed to do.

You need to place your host computer in the DMZ of your routers firewall so Internet users can access it via its IP.

2007-10-08 22:34:13 · answer #3 · answered by Taba 7 · 0 0

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