Have you considered SolarWinds Server & Application Monitor? The latest version, currently in beta adds an optional agent that negates the need for VPN tunnels. It supports overlapping IP address space, NAT traversal, passing through authenticated proxy servers, and communications are fully encrypted. These agents report back to a single, centralized server at your location, or in the cloud, such as Amazon EC2, Azure, RackSpace, etc..
More information can be found at the following links.
https://thwack.solarwinds.com/...https://thwack.solarwinds.com/...https://thwack.solarwinds.com/...
If that doesn't fit the bill, you should consider taking a look at N-able, which is a purpose built solution designed specifically with MSP's in mind. More information on N-able can be found at the following link.
http://www.n-able.com/
I wish that was true, but I am both a Cogent customer (100meg Link) and a Level3 customer (Multiple T1's) and the worst is true. My Level3 connection can not reach my Cogent connection, and my Cogent connection can not reach my Level3 circuts. Level3 is no longer BGP peering with Cogent so all routes normally advertised to Level3 no longer exist (from the prospective of Level3 customers). And although the request packet from Cogent might make it to Level3's network via another provider (i.e. route around the problem) with no route back to Cogent's network (BGP ASN 174) there is no way to get the traffic back to the user on the Cogent network.
What a GREAT idea! Anyone know if there is anything like FlashBlock for Internet Explorer? I do Active-X development and need IE for my job, but I'm short of uninstalling flash to get rid of those damn adds.
IE user on Slashdot = Flame Bait
Are underage students who are living on a high school campus doing P2P responsible for their own actions or does that responsibility / liability fall to the school?
Have you considered SolarWinds Server & Application Monitor? The latest version, currently in beta adds an optional agent that negates the need for VPN tunnels. It supports overlapping IP address space, NAT traversal, passing through authenticated proxy servers, and communications are fully encrypted. These agents report back to a single, centralized server at your location, or in the cloud, such as Amazon EC2, Azure, RackSpace, etc.. More information can be found at the following links. https://thwack.solarwinds.com/... https://thwack.solarwinds.com/... https://thwack.solarwinds.com/... If that doesn't fit the bill, you should consider taking a look at N-able, which is a purpose built solution designed specifically with MSP's in mind. More information on N-able can be found at the following link. http://www.n-able.com/
$25 billion sure buys a whole lot of Linksys routers!
I wish that was true, but I am both a Cogent customer (100meg Link) and a Level3 customer (Multiple T1's) and the worst is true. My Level3 connection can not reach my Cogent connection, and my Cogent connection can not reach my Level3 circuts. Level3 is no longer BGP peering with Cogent so all routes normally advertised to Level3 no longer exist (from the prospective of Level3 customers). And although the request packet from Cogent might make it to Level3's network via another provider (i.e. route around the problem) with no route back to Cogent's network (BGP ASN 174) there is no way to get the traffic back to the user on the Cogent network.
What a GREAT idea! Anyone know if there is anything like FlashBlock for Internet Explorer? I do Active-X development and need IE for my job, but I'm short of uninstalling flash to get rid of those damn adds. IE user on Slashdot = Flame Bait
Funny, I've never need a Mac Emulator on my Windows or Linux machines to run Mac software... must not be anything worth running on that platform....
Are underage students who are living on a high school campus doing P2P responsible for their own actions or does that responsibility / liability fall to the school?
Thank God for TiVo!