Remoting the K2

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Remoting the K2

N8LP
Hi Stephen. Check out DynDNS. They provide a free service that
correlates an alphanumeric IP alias address with your currently assigned
numeric IP address. A utility on your PC provides your address to their
server. The service is called DDNS. Some routers have this built in.
Instead of an address like nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn, the address of your PC
becomes something like g4dsp.homeip.net. The server finds you based on
its knowledge of your actual address. I believe this is discussed in one
of the sections of my website (www.telepostinc.com) under the heading
Remote Base Station Related Stuff...

I posted an email about this to the list in response to your earlier
inquiry, but I forgot to change the Subject (it was posted from a digest
entry), so you may have missed it. There is lots of interesting info
about the remote control system I use there.

73,
Larry N8LP



> Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2008 07:55:13 +0000
> From: Stephen Prior <[hidden email]>
> Subject: [Elecraft] Remoting the K2
> To: elecraft <[hidden email]>
> Message-ID: <C3C5DDE1.20E5%[hidden email]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>
> Thanks to all with their help and advice which I must now mull over.  One
> thing that has (rather late in the day) occurred to me is that I do not have
> a static IP address from my ISP.  So I could, presumably, look up the
> address given and use that, accepting that I shall have to change the
> settings every time I reboot the router which is very rarely.
>
> 73 Stephen G4SJP
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Re: Remoting the K2

n3ckk
You might want to look at dd-wrt.  It is an alternative software for several types of home routers.  I've run dd-wrt on the Linksys wrt-54gl and the Linksys wrt-350n (hardware version 1) and I'm happy with it.  Recent versions of dd-wrt include DynDNS support (including several other dns services) as well as providing a lot of flexibility on forwarding specific inbound services (ports) to specific pcs on your home network, in case you have several.
Best of luck,
tom
n3ckk
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RE: Remoting the K2

Brett Howard
In reply to this post by N8LP
The only problem is that the location with the dynamic IP is the station in
which he's connecting from.  And if he was to lock down the connection at
the firewall to an IP he'd have to change that whenever he got a new dynamic
address.  

It's a bad idea to tie a secure connection to a resolveable name.  Those are
much easier to spoof than an IP.  But I guess its at least still better than
leaving it wide open.  Although I don't think most firewalls will allow you
to put in a resolveable address.  That would mean it would have to
technically re-resolve it whenever each packet came in.  Or after each DNS
cache flush.  

-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email]
[mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Larry Phipps
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2008 5:39 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: [Elecraft] Remoting the K2

Hi Stephen. Check out DynDNS. They provide a free service that
correlates an alphanumeric IP alias address with your currently assigned
numeric IP address. A utility on your PC provides your address to their
server. The service is called DDNS. Some routers have this built in.
Instead of an address like nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn, the address of your PC
becomes something like g4dsp.homeip.net. The server finds you based on
its knowledge of your actual address. I believe this is discussed in one
of the sections of my website (www.telepostinc.com) under the heading
Remote Base Station Related Stuff...

I posted an email about this to the list in response to your earlier
inquiry, but I forgot to change the Subject (it was posted from a digest
entry), so you may have missed it. There is lots of interesting info
about the remote control system I use there.

73,
Larry N8LP



> Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2008 07:55:13 +0000
> From: Stephen Prior <[hidden email]>
> Subject: [Elecraft] Remoting the K2
> To: elecraft <[hidden email]>
> Message-ID: <C3C5DDE1.20E5%[hidden email]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>
> Thanks to all with their help and advice which I must now mull over.  One
> thing that has (rather late in the day) occurred to me is that I do not
have
> a static IP address from my ISP.  So I could, presumably, look up the
> address given and use that, accepting that I shall have to change the
> settings every time I reboot the router which is very rarely.
>
> 73 Stephen G4SJP
_______________________________________________
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Post to: [hidden email]
You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
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 http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft   

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Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com

_______________________________________________
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You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
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Re: Remoting the K2

Stephen  Prior
Larry (thanks for the email) and Brett

Thanks for your continued thoughts on this.  I'm not sure, however, that I
have made the situation clear enough.  The computer (Mac) connected to the
K2 is at home and is the one with the dynamic IP address.  Does it matter
what type of address the work network has?

I'm working outside of my experience here, as you can probably tell!

73 Stephen G4SJP


On 30/1/08 19:28, "Brett Howard" <[hidden email]> wrote:

> The only problem is that the location with the dynamic IP is the station in
> which he's connecting from.  And if he was to lock down the connection at
> the firewall to an IP he'd have to change that whenever he got a new dynamic
> address.  
>
> It's a bad idea to tie a secure connection to a resolveable name.  Those are
> much easier to spoof than an IP.  But I guess its at least still better than
> leaving it wide open.  Although I don't think most firewalls will allow you
> to put in a resolveable address.  That would mean it would have to
> technically re-resolve it whenever each packet came in.  Or after each DNS
> cache flush.  
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [hidden email]
> [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Larry Phipps
> Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2008 5:39 AM
> To: [hidden email]
> Subject: [Elecraft] Remoting the K2
>
> Hi Stephen. Check out DynDNS. They provide a free service that
> correlates an alphanumeric IP alias address with your currently assigned
> numeric IP address. A utility on your PC provides your address to their
> server. The service is called DDNS. Some routers have this built in.
> Instead of an address like nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn, the address of your PC
> becomes something like g4dsp.homeip.net. The server finds you based on
> its knowledge of your actual address. I believe this is discussed in one
> of the sections of my website (www.telepostinc.com) under the heading
> Remote Base Station Related Stuff...
>
> I posted an email about this to the list in response to your earlier
> inquiry, but I forgot to change the Subject (it was posted from a digest
> entry), so you may have missed it. There is lots of interesting info
> about the remote control system I use there.
>
> 73,
> Larry N8LP
>
>
>
>> Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2008 07:55:13 +0000
>> From: Stephen Prior <[hidden email]>
>> Subject: [Elecraft] Remoting the K2
>> To: elecraft <[hidden email]>
>> Message-ID: <C3C5DDE1.20E5%[hidden email]>
>> Content-Type: text/plain;    charset="US-ASCII"
>>
>> Thanks to all with their help and advice which I must now mull over.  One
>> thing that has (rather late in the day) occurred to me is that I do not
> have
>> a static IP address from my ISP.  So I could, presumably, look up the
>> address given and use that, accepting that I shall have to change the
>> settings every time I reboot the router which is very rarely.
>>
>> 73 Stephen G4SJP
> _______________________________________________
> Elecraft mailing list
> Post to: [hidden email]
> You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
> Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.):
>  http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
>
> Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm
> Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com
>
> _______________________________________________
> Elecraft mailing list
> Post to: [hidden email]
> You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
> Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.):
>  http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
>
> Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm
> Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com
>



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Re: Remoting the K2

N8LP
In reply to this post by Brett Howard
A router with DDNS support can do this automatically. Plus, the firewall
is only open to a piece of hardware that converts serial port data into
TCP port data... not to a PC. Nobody is going to hack into a black box
with dedicated firmware when there are millions of Windows machines out
there to hack into. There is very little risk in that, unless I'm
missing something (not unheard of, BTW ;-)

Larry N8LP

 

Brett Howard wrote:

> The only problem is that the location with the dynamic IP is the station in
> which he's connecting from.  And if he was to lock down the connection at
> the firewall to an IP he'd have to change that whenever he got a new dynamic
> address.  
>
> It's a bad idea to tie a secure connection to a resolveable name.  Those are
> much easier to spoof than an IP.  But I guess its at least still better than
> leaving it wide open.  Although I don't think most firewalls will allow you
> to put in a resolveable address.  That would mean it would have to
> technically re-resolve it whenever each packet came in.  Or after each DNS
> cache flush.  
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [hidden email]
> [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Larry Phipps
> Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2008 5:39 AM
> To: [hidden email]
> Subject: [Elecraft] Remoting the K2
>
> Hi Stephen. Check out DynDNS. They provide a free service that
> correlates an alphanumeric IP alias address with your currently assigned
> numeric IP address. A utility on your PC provides your address to their
> server. The service is called DDNS. Some routers have this built in.
> Instead of an address like nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn, the address of your PC
> becomes something like g4dsp.homeip.net. The server finds you based on
> its knowledge of your actual address. I believe this is discussed in one
> of the sections of my website (www.telepostinc.com) under the heading
> Remote Base Station Related Stuff...
>
> I posted an email about this to the list in response to your earlier
> inquiry, but I forgot to change the Subject (it was posted from a digest
> entry), so you may have missed it. There is lots of interesting info
> about the remote control system I use there.
>
> 73,
> Larry N8LP
>
>
>
>  
>> Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2008 07:55:13 +0000
>> From: Stephen Prior <[hidden email]>
>> Subject: [Elecraft] Remoting the K2
>> To: elecraft <[hidden email]>
>> Message-ID: <C3C5DDE1.20E5%[hidden email]>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>>
>> Thanks to all with their help and advice which I must now mull over.  One
>> thing that has (rather late in the day) occurred to me is that I do not
>>    
> have
>  
>> a static IP address from my ISP.  So I could, presumably, look up the
>> address given and use that, accepting that I shall have to change the
>> settings every time I reboot the router which is very rarely.
>>
>> 73 Stephen G4SJP
>>    
> _______________________________________________
> Elecraft mailing list
> Post to: [hidden email]
> You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
> Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.):
>  http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft   
>
> Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm
> Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com
>
>
>  
_______________________________________________
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Post to: [hidden email]
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