Hmmm...tried ngrok. the remote computer connected fine but within a minute I got onscreen errors. When I logged out (from the remote computer) I got the second error.AT&T mobile (cellular) hotspots employ carrier-grade NAT, meaning no public IP is available. You'll likely have to use Hamachi or ngrok to access BI remotely.
That being said, BI can still get OUT and send alerts to you via e-mail or push notifications to the BI app on your smartphone or tablet.
Thanks, I'll look at this one too.Im using airvpn. It runs on the computer with blueiris.and blueiris picks up the ip and away we go.
Works with att wireless and verizon both.
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Yea it will. Thats what im doing. With my iphone.Will airvpn allow me to use the BI app on my phone?
Will airvpn allow me to use the BI app on my phone?
Airvpn is a "service" that merely hides your IP and encrypts your traffic BUT requires using their server(s), which IMO, negates any real security with any tunnel, despite touting "OpenVPN".Yea it will. Thats what im doing. With my iphone.
Airvpn is a service but it also give you a public ip.Airvpn is a "service" that merely hides your IP and encrypts your traffic BUT requires using their server(s), which IMO, negates any real security with any tunnel, despite touting "OpenVPN".
Running OpenVPN on a router and a OpenVPN client on your iPhone is a very different ballgame...it IS secure.
BUT for me, and this is fact not speculation, my AT&T wireless is carrier-grade NAT with NO public IP available and no VPN service such as airvpn will allow secure, remote access to my LAN. I don't know this for fact, but I have read on other forums that a public IP can be purchased for a "business" wireless (cellular) account for $350 to $500. Even if true, TonyR won't be doing that.
The airvpn yes.
Thx for confirming what I alluded to in post #10. For every 10 AT&T CS agents you speak with, you get 10 different stories of availability and price, not to mention the differences of what will and will not work among geographic regions served by "The Giant Corporation that swallowed America" with the Feds approval.We run an AT&T mobile "hotspot" which serves as fail-over internet connectivity for out office when/if cable goes down. AT&T charged us $500.00 flat to provision our mobile hotspot with a single static IP address. At the time AT&T called the service "i2gold."
Are yoh behind att also? What do you use or how?Thx for confirming what I alluded to in post #10. For every 10 AT&T CS agents you speak with, you get 10 different stories of availability and price, not to mention the differences of what will and will not work among geographic regions served by "The Giant Corporation that swallowed America" with the Feds approval.
The issue is not att. Its the lte/cellular that does not provide a routerable ip, same with WISP and SAT. The solutions are discussed in this thread.Are yoh behind att also? What do you use or how?
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