I diable my firewall I dont run on enow it pisses me off causes more problems then protection
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I diable my firewall I dont run on enow it pisses me off causes more problems then protection
can u or anyone else confirm that i have to allow these ports in the frwall? and how come shadow's exp uses 6881-6999 when the guide said they go to 6889?Quote:
Originally posted by abu_has_the_power@18 October 2003 - 03:13
and i'm guessing i input the port #'s in the allow incoming UDP and incoming TCP ports rite?
This is from the guide that u said didn't say shit about ZA.
ZoneAlarm Pro v. 3.5.166
ZoneAlarm Pro is a popular software package used to perform basic packet filtering and other security-related tasks. Here is how we got ZoneAlarm to work with Conference Manager:
Doubleclick on the ZoneAlarm icon in the system tray, navigate to the "Firewall" section, and then to the "Internet Zone Security" section.
You can proceed in one of two ways:
Set "Internet Zone Security" to "Med.".
or
Leave "Internet Zone Security" set to "High", but adjust which UDP ports are allowed past the ZoneAlarm firewall/packet filter. Click "Custom" in the "Internet Zone Security" area, scroll down to and check "Allow Incoming UDP ports", then enter "15900-15999" (omit the quotation marks, but include the hyphen) in the associated text input field. Click "Apply".
oh, thank u so much. now, only the udp ports? or tcp as well?
sory, i must have been talking about another guideQuote:
Originally posted by justin_9733@18 October 2003 - 06:22
This is from the guide that u said didn't say shit about ZA.
ur a dumbass
I refuse to help him any more, I gave him that very same link at least twice before
and my only conclusion is he is a dumbass, I'm sorry to say
ok, i'm a dumbass, but just answer the tcp and udp question. do i allow 6881-6889 on both, or just udp?
Why would BT use UDP ? Using UDP means you don't care if the data gets through completely or not, and that's not quite what you want now is it ?
Have you ever thought of reading the FAQ for BT? http://btfaq.com/
dude, the guide up there said udpQuote:
Originally posted by danne@18 October 2003 - 13:12
Why would BT use UDP ? Using UDP means you don't care if the data gets through completely or not, and that's not quite what you want now is it ?
Have you ever thought of reading the FAQ for BT? http://btfaq.com/