![]() :-} The only time I've gone out of my comfort zone with IT post the Amigas heyday was back when Windows 98SE pee'd me off so badly I looked for an alternative and found Linux, which I've used since. No, I've never needed to know anything about servers other than that they're what web pages and databases live on. Yes, I have simply stuck to that tech I either needed/wanted myself or needed to understand for the various jobs I've had, and not much else. ![]() Although granted, you HAVE then gone on to actually answer my question somewhat, KH, so thanks for that but (raspberry) for being a boor.Īnd - bearing in mind I did indirectly allude to my innocence of such things, and I'm saying so explicitly now - runing what 'services' on your server? I genuinely do not know what sort of things one would have a home server accessible from the internet for and I'm curious. Giving a snarky answer to such a question is as stupid as it is impolite. So I politely asked for enlightenment as to how that came to be. ![]() But in these very pages some have reported having fallen victim to the reported problem under circumstances that puzzled me. Re: pardon my ignorance Adam JC and Known Hero - I KNOW who Teamviewers main target audience is, thanks, very - we use it where I work (I have to use it to look at user desktops on an almost daily basis). As opposed to installing it with an always on setting? Would seem like a no-brainer, both on the feature existing and on making use of it. Meanwhile - back in 2016 - if you have to use TeamViewer or the like, is it not a standard feature with that type of software to specifically have to activate/enable every time it before someone can remote in? Like, talk to your correspondent over the phone, activate it and then he/she can get in? After which you deactivate it again. And then go on public record stating it wasn't their fault even as multiple clients get burglarized. ![]() Would multiple millionaires have their security systems connected to the internet? And it also beggars belief that TeamLock, the vendor of that alarm system would design a system hackable by default. Unfortunately, the movie is none too credible otherwise. The Heist is a passable action movie, with Scarlett Johansson channeling Black Widow and Entrapment's buttock sequence very fetchingly. ![]()
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