I wouldn't go opening ports in the firewall for it, as most of a VNC session isn't encrypted. I'd set up a VPN, so you could access each machine directly.
I just went through this and everything installed cleanly. Not with a Realtek driver though.
You shouldn't have to enter parameters at all, but you do need to choose the right driver. If you're not sure (and looking through your device manager under Windows doesn't make it clear), then...
Are you running Linux? My mailserver is set up to take every e-mail and forward it to ClamAV for an OK before accepting it for delivery; I'm using Exim but I've seen directions for doing the same on Postfix and Qmail. It seems you could have your local mail server fetch mail from your ISP...
Go ahead and make sure your firewall is set to pass FTP traffic to the correct internal address of the FTP box. That's the first thing.
If you don't have access to a PC outside your network, feel free to PM me a login/password/address for your box and I'll tell you if I can successfully get there.
Quick and easy:
1) Network connection comes into modem/router
2) Router/Modem's LAN connection is connected to the WAN port of a Webramp 700s or comparable (essentially a Sonicwall original; no longer supported, but cheap on eBay and plenty for your needs. I've seen 'em for $25 in the FS forum...
You can let them know your ip address each time they connect (www.whatismyip.com works well), or you can register with one of the Dynamic DNS services. You should be able to go to no-ip.com and get yourself set up as connoisseur.no-ip.org for free, using a client that will update your IP...
Officescan is decent, but IIRC there's another component you need if you want to run it on your fileservers.
If you're gonna be putting in a firewall anyway, go to www.sonicguard.com and look at the AV licenses you can use with a SonicWALL box. Pretty affordable, and you're protected from...
netstat -an when I'm trying to figure out what connections are open. Netstat -an | grep -c :80 when trying to figure out how many instances of Apache are running (and whether that exceeds current limits.) It's useful.
Yeah, but it's not faster than "portinstall foo," especially when installing software from a more recent release. :P
I run Debian SPARC and FreeBSD x86 side-by-side, and don't see any huge advantages to one over the other. You're welcome to disagree, of course. ;)
I upgraded a Redhat 8 box this weekend -- moved to FreeBSD but could have moved to Debian just as easily.
The problem with installing from source is exactly what you're talking about -- a bunch of cruft lying everywhere from upgrades. If you RPM -Uhv'd the packages to install them, then RPM...
I use ClamAV on my mail machine -- every incoming mail gets handed to the scanner before mail is accepted. It'll scan files on demand as well, and is free (including updates -- I believe it default it updates every 2 hours), but won't scan on access like most Windows viruses do. There's also...
Any Unixy solution running Samba will work acceptably here. If I were you I'd focus on support issues - how much effort is going to be required to keep this thing going and keep it up-to-date with security patches and the like.
After thinking these issues through, I've decided on 2 platforms...
www.e-smith.org (now called Mitel SME server). Installs in 10 minutes, and you admin it from a web browser. The closest I've seen to a Linux appliance that isn't actually an appliance. Easy to configure for web, e-mail, file-serving, etc.
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