vpn

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corpse
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vpn

Post by corpse »

A friend works at home for a larger company and has a vpn set up on his computer to the company network. His connection is very slow and when we looked in network settings, it shows the vpn connection in dial-up options and vpn settings [as I guess it should].

In Internet Explorer, tools options, it shows the vpn as a dial up as stated and then just below that, the "dial whenever a network connection is not present" is checked.

My question is, does this mean that the connection is a dial up connection? Or is this just the way vpns are set up?
+JuggerNaut+
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Post by +JuggerNaut+ »

there are three different types of vpn's. intranet, extranet, and remote access. remote access is most likely what your friend is using and it is most likely a dialup connection.
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Foo
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Location: New Zealand

Re: vpn

Post by Foo »

corpse wrote:A friend works at home for a larger company and has a vpn set up on his computer to the company network. His connection is very slow and when we looked in network settings, it shows the vpn connection in dial-up options and vpn settings [as I guess it should].

In Internet Explorer, tools options, it shows the vpn as a dial up as stated and then just below that, the "dial whenever a network connection is not present" is checked.

My question is, does this mean that the connection is a dial up connection? Or is this just the way vpns are set up?
Well, does he have a broadband connection, or is he plugging the PC modem into a phone line to connect?
corpse
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Post by corpse »

At home it is broadband, but at the office he's not sure.
Underpants?
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Post by Underpants? »

I'm only familiar with 3 types of vpn connections, so this may be more of an exclusive answer but
cisco vpn uses either dial-up or broadband, and if the connection is broadband, all you see is a virtual adapter (Local Area Connection ##, for example in winxp) which does not in effect add a dial-up connection--so if it's cisco then your answer is most likely yes, unless this guy has multiple connections for redundancy.
Openvpn does the same kind of thing with a win32 TAP adapter for broadband, but has to be bonded to a pre-existing dial-up connection for a telephone vpn connection.
Here's my best stab at advice: watch how he connects, if it just connects quickly and without the heinous shrieking of a modem it's likely not dial-up.
Doombrain
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Post by Doombrain »

Underpants? wrote:I'm only familiar with 3 types of vpn connections, so this may be more of an exclusive answer but
cisco vpn uses either dial-up or broadband, and if the connection is broadband, all you see is a virtual adapter (Local Area Connection ##, for example in winxp) which does not in effect add a dial-up connection--so if it's cisco then your answer is most likely yes, unless this guy has multiple connections for redundancy.
Openvpn does the same kind of thing with a win32 TAP adapter for broadband, but has to be bonded to a pre-existing dial-up connection for a telephone vpn connection.
Here's my best stab at advice: watch how he connects, if it just connects quickly and without the heinous shrieking of a modem it's likely not dial-up.


vpn uses either dial-up or broadband,

NO SHIT :olo:
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Underpants?
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Post by Underpants? »

:olo: Breaking into grandpa's cough syrup a bit early aren't we? :olo:
GODLIKE
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Post by GODLIKE »

IE's "dial whenever a network connection is not present" settings don't mean your using dialup. They can be used to make IE activate the VPN whenever IE or outlook is run, as well...
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