i do this often, i copy something on one comp, hit the KVM hot keys to switch over to a dif. PC, and am surprised when whatever i just copied doesn't paste.
rdp > *
i do this often, i copy something on one comp, hit the KVM hot keys to switch over to a dif. PC, and am surprised when whatever i just copied doesn't paste.
So these things are still giving me a lil hell, I brought them home and I'm gonna get them running or ... DESTROY THEM!!!
So are you a network guy or just THE it guy?
dumbest thing i've ever done networking wise was buy a cisco wireless router for our office. we kept killing them so i figured we'd better go with business grade equipment.
it still sits, unconfigured, having never worked, in a drawer by my desk. a reminder that i'm not a "real" IT person.
dumbest thing i've ever done networking wise was buy a cisco wireless router for our office. we kept killing them so i figured we'd better go with business grade equipment.
it still sits, unconfigured, having never worked, in a drawer by my desk. a reminder that i'm not a "real" IT person.
What were you killing before?
The new Cisco Small Business stuff is actually pretty easy to configure.
Also, stop buying WAPs for the offices, get some dirt on your knees and run some CAT6 through that office.
Got nothing but laptops? pony up for some docking stations.
You still generally need wireless for guests and contractors...
and it's not like you can really kill them so much as they just die on their own
one WAP in the conference room then, depending on your config, set it up seperate from the corporate LAN, and tightly restrict it. make sure you set up a WPA passcode and only give it out to guests, maybe change it every so often.
The guest Wifi in Cisco's own offices is fairly unrestricted interestingly enough.
That doesn't surprise me. I'll bet they have geek brain power behind it to build an isolated VLAN with it's own direct port to the internet and a modicum of access to internal network resources while being locked down to the rest of their enterprise network. I'd kill to get a look at their router configs to see what kind of magic they work with them.