| bio | website | |
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| location | ||
| age | 19 | |
| visits | member for | 3 years, 4 months |
| seen | 16 hours ago | |
| stats | profile views | 2 |
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Apr 29 |
comment |
Outlook 2010 changes server's name Entirely standard configuration. Encapsulation of RPC traffic in an SSL sockets layer to get through firewalls is pretty common. You do, of course, need to update the Outlook configuration to ensure it points to the external FQDN of the Client Access Array, which tells it where the RPC proxy is when not on the network. If you want to check how it is working, then that will be through using Wireshark or some traffic monitor on the firewall itself to look at the HTTPS (TCP port 443) packets passing through as you use Outlook from an external connection. |
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Apr 28 |
answered | Outlook 2010 changes server's name |
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Apr 28 |
comment |
SBS 2011: unable to access remote.mydomain.com/myapp after moving from internal to external network Something in the back of my mind is saying the browser has a local DNS cache too (and modern browsers like Chrome play with DNS by doing pre-fetching and so forth). It may be worthwhile ensuring the browser is restarted when moving networks. Alternatively, consider lowering the TTL of those records on internal and external DNS, but be cognisant of the additional traffic consumed in doing that! |
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Apr 28 |
comment |
Install Forefront Threat Management Gateway on Domain controller Are you installing on a read only domain controller? That is all that is supported with Forefront TMG SP1: blogs.technet.com/b/isablog/archive/2010/06/24/… |
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Apr 3 |
answered | What does “Use mandatory profiles on the RD Session Host server” do? |
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Apr 3 |
answered | SBS 2003 to Server 2012 -architecture |
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Apr 2 |
comment |
ubuntu bind reverse look up fails Are you sure your public IP comes from Network Solutions? That may be the place your domain is hosted... I've never heard of them acting as an ISP, but then I'm not in the US which is probably where their market would be. I highly suspect you are not in control of your reverse DNS zone, and you need to contact your ISP to have this record created. Figure out the ISP you lease your IP addresses from. They are the people who manage the DNS servers for the reverse zone (which is not linked to the forward zone for any domains you own, e.g. .com). They need to create the records for you. |
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Apr 2 |
comment |
ubuntu bind reverse look up fails Are you authoritative for the reverse zone at one of the Regional Internet Registries, or do you lease IP addresses from a third-party ISP? If you don't know the answer, it is most likely the latter, and that is probably where your problem lies. Most small-to-medium-sized rigs are simply assigned an IP range from their ISP, and therefore do not have control for the reverse lookup zone delegated to them. Your ISP would need to make the reverse DNS record on your behalf, or delegate the zone to you to make the changes (again, that is unlikely to happen as you do not "own" the addresses per se). |
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Jan 5 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Aug 6 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Jan 5 |
answered | Accessing networked computers by hostname? |
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Jan 5 |
answered | Domain name: REDEMPTIONPERIOD |