hawk#1
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2015
- Messages
- 716
- Reaction score
- 308
I don’t know. Be more specific and I will test it.
All of those are allowed.port 21, 23, 25, and 30 if it is not too much trouble
Good info.Yes, appears to rely on SLAAC to assign from a /64 prefix.
After further research I also found that several of my smart devices do not even need any app to setup. It is called Standalone Mode and the setup instructions are included in the manuals.I like and use these for lights switches and plugs and cameras, no internet or alexa needed, home automation integration easy though.
5060/SIP works? If so, then this is the failover for VoIP clients I've been waiting for.All of those are allowed.
I am not sure I understand what you're asking. It doesn't block any communications on the LAN. It just blocks any inbound attempts from the WAN side.So, given that, does the device's 'firewall' block also services offered by such ipv6 local hosts, given a legitimate and resolvable AAAA record ?
No, Ward already noted this. 5060 appears to be filtered. I get no replies back when I try to send traffic on 5060. I tried on a high-numbered alternate port, 65060, and made a plain SIP call. Also as I noted before SIP-TLS works fine on its standard port of 5061.5060/SIP works? If so, then this is the failover for VoIP clients I've been waiting for.
Signed up Monday in the Atlanta burbs. Router arrived on Wednesday. I think their signal is marginal in my neighborhood. It took several tries to find a good spot. It's now on the night stand in the guest room. My speed varies between 100 and 300, but so far it's been solid. Got it for a backup but it might become my primary if it remains stable. Happy so far.Doesn't seem to be much rhyme or reason to the rollout. We've got excellent 4G and 5G service in Asheville, Charleston, and Jacksonville but only Asheville has qualified thus far. But, once you get the device, it apparently will work anywhere there's T-Mobile service. Will let you know. We're about to do lots of traveling.
@kenn10 - I use my cell for that(visible baby, yeah!!!!), but I am an I.T. consultant and there are times I need to be away from home office, in car for 2-3 hours and my clients need immediate response\help. So instead of finding a near by "free" wifi this could be replacement for non-cell hotspot....I've never paid for the in-vehicle hot spot on my vehicles due to the excessive cost. I just use the hotspot on my phone if I need to share the internet with others in the car.
The difference is this provides unlimited data unlike the hot spot on your phone.I prefer to pay half the monthly price and use two visible join the party accounts. One for cell calls and the other provides hotspot.
It takes 12VDC @ 41W peak. You could probably use a cigarette-lighter-to-DC-barrel adapter fused for 4A. I see some on Amazon.Interested to see if this will work in a car
I realize the data may be limitless, but when I am in a vehicle and need to get online to help get someone back online, I have not been able to reach the maximum data limits on my hotspot phone. All I need is little data for a remote connection. Then any other data needed will will be provided from the 200/20 MB line connected to the server. Need to download diagnostic software, have server download and run it directly on the server. I'm just a one minded person. I can't multitask and use multiple connections at the same time like @wardmundy. LolThe difference is this provides unlimited data unlike the hot spot on your phone.
Link up your team and customers Phone System
Live Chat
Video Conferencing
Hosted or Self-managed. Up to 10 users free forever. No credit card. Try risk free.
Check your inbox!
We’ve sent you an email. Click on the button in the email body to verify your email address – (if you can not find it, check your spam folder).
Upon verification you will be directed to the 3CX setup wizard.