Update: IT WORKS and MORE! I finally got Teamviewer to work through the Mesh nodes! No special configuration in BBHN (default 5-node Direct). Teamviewer justs need to have "Incoming Lan Connections" on the General Tab, set to "ALLOW". When your network is LAN only (with no Internet), Teamviewer will show the IP address of your PC. No portforwarding to configure, no rules, no tunneling. Just some clean up on the leftover PC network configuration (DNS & DHCP) after changing from wifi to LAN. I disabled my wifi adapters on my test PCs and did an "ipconfig /flushdns", "ipconfig /release" and "ipconfig/renew" to clean up the net configuration on the WIN7 PCs. After that, it worked flawlessly! I think the problem was that Windows (7 & Vista) gets confused when you start changing network configurations. Now I can remote control any PC (whether it's XP, Vista, Win7 or Linux) on the Mesh. If you add Internet to your Mesh, it will display a 9 digit number or if you are using the online web management, you can assign a name to each PC. You can connect to remote PCs using the 9 digit number, IP address or Name. The main objective was to be able to control an HF rig at my home from the EOC. I can connect to the PC at home (the radio and PC have to be on) with a connection to a Mesh node (Internet for normal use). Once connected to the remote PC I can bring up HRD (v.5.X, the last free version), activate the VOIP on both PCs (I keep the mic muted in VOIP on the PC I'm working from. If you don't, it will key the transmitter VOX). With a headset/boom mic, I transmit & receive, change bands, frequencies and do anything I would do with HRD, sitting in my shack. Added benefits of Teamviewer 9 besides being free: It has built in Chat, VOIP, Video, file sharing and of course remote control! One free application that does a whole lot. |