Quote:
Originally Posted by iEagle
nice job adelma, using the source yuki and i updated,
btw, if anything were to lets just say happen to ur computer and the source, i take no responcibility :rolleyes:
|
with the right tools u can lick my balls
[Only registered and activated users can see links. Click Here To Register...]
4 the past 3-4pages all i seen from ur nerdy ass behind a screen from which your mom/dad bought for you, o wait not to mention the chair your sitting in while read this..
i have concluded that you are a big failure in life that "acts" <--see how i put ""<- , ... THE BEST CODER ...
last time i checked, wait wait i never really checked..i know that most of that shit you are making its mostly got/requested or even stolen then posted on elitepvpers, then you hapened to be online at the time of the posting..downloaded the files, then MOD's deleted the link of the download...waited 1-4 weeks , check out the source, did a little editting then, released it by saying...
MySource:
Ninja,...
....
starbulshit armor
if there are spelling mistakes, i dont give a shit, i type , i dont check over my spelling..
and EDIT:
4. Restrict access to only computers in your Hamachi private network.
In order to connect to the VNC server, the port it's running on (5900 by default) has to be opened up on your computer's software firewall. Additionally, when you're using Hamachi and its predefined IP addresses, for an extra layer of security you can restrict access to that port to only computers on your Hamachi network. Firewall configurations vary from product to product, but in Windows Firewall, you'd go to the exceptions tab to open the VNC server, as shown.
Click on the Edit button to specify the IP addresses allowed into the VNC server - that is, the Hamachi IP of your viewer computer.
Sadly - and surprisingly - Mac OS X's built-in firewall does NOT support IP ranges the way Windows Firewall does. If you're behind a wireless router, here's how to poke a hole in that firewall to access your VNC server.
6. Connect to the VNC server over the secure, encrypted, private Hamachi network.
When it comes time to connect, first make sure both the VNC server and viewer computers are on the Hamachi network. From the viewer computer, enter the name of the server in the VNC client and click Ok.
Here's a screengrab of a VNC connection to my Mac and Windows XP machine from Vista. Click to enlarge (warning: this one's pretty wide):
And that's that! You're remote controlling your computer over a secure, encrypted connection.
For more VNC love, check out how to email your Mom a Single-Click VNC server that will connect to your viewer automatically.
Also, remember that Hamachi makes any server connection a secure one. You can also use Hamachi to make secure connections to your personal web server, home FTP server, home wiki installation, shared Windows folders, or simply use it to stream a remote iTunes library across the internet, too.