Keith,
There is a Yahoo group. Ten-Tec-Omni-VII Give it a try.
73,
John
-----Original Message-----
From: tentec-bounces@contesting.com [mailto:tentec-bounces@contesting.com]
On Behalf Of Keith Hamilton
Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2011 6:05 PM
To: Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment
Subject: Re: [TenTec] Omni VII / Static IP address
Wish I understood all of this! Instead of getting into a discussion that
would probably bore the group and make them angry, could you lead me and
others to a web page or site that would be helpful to a novice in setting up
his new Omni VII on the internet??? That would save a ton of bandwidth and
make me a good neighbor! :)
Thank you and 73!
Keith Hamilton N8CEP
On Oct 18, 2011, at 5:42 PM, geoffrey mendelson wrote:
>
> On Oct 18, 2011, at 11:27 PM, John/K4WJ wrote:
>
>> A friend is going to purchase an Omni VII so that he can remotely
>> access it from his current noisy and antenna restricted building.
>> I'm trying to shorten the learning period required to get everything
>> working properly.
>
>
> First thing you do is to use a router to connect to the internet.
> Using port forwarding, aka virtual servers, you forward data from the
> router to the radio.
>
> Then you sign up for a free account from one of the free domain
> servers that the router supports. Just about every router made in the
> last 5 years supports DynDNS.org, and there are lots of others.
>
> When you sign up you pick a free hostname using one of their free
> domains. Let's say they provide one called homeradio.org (a random
> example). You could pick W1AW if that was your callsign and make it
> w1aw.homeradio.org. You are better off using security via obscurity
> and making the domain name something you will remember but no one else
> will, and is not already in use.
>
> Then he sets up the router so that when it connects to the internet it
> updates his DNS name to the current IP address. Then he would just
> connect to w1aw@homeradio.org.
>
> If the software on the computer allows you to select the TCP/IP port
> it uses and the router allows you to set port forwarding to a
> different port, then you can use a port that is not normally used
> which makes it harder to find.
>
> In this case the example would be if the radio used port 80, having
> the router forward it would be dangerous because it is a common port
> and often used in hacking attempts. If you had port 12345 forwarded to
> 80 on the radio then it would be less likely to be hacked (or
> attempted).
>
> This is going to get more complicated, but if I were doing it I would
> install a small computer there and have it connected to the router
> too, without forwarding the radio port. I would install an SSH server
> so that I could connect to it through the router using SSH encrypted
> port forwarding. I would also set up SSH so that it only accepts 4096
> bit keys for authentication and not passwords or shorter keys. If you
> don't know what I am talking about, ask someone who is a professional
> UNIX/LINUX sysadmin, they do it often. (or you can contact me off the
> list).
>
> Geoff.
>
>
> --
> Geoffrey S. Mendelson, N3OWJ/4X1GM
> My high blood pressure medicine reduces my midichlorian count. :-(
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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>
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