Windows xp remote access port




















The machine you want to connect to must have either Terminal Services or Remote Desktop sharing installed and running. The machine you want to connect from must have the Terminal Services or Remote Desktop client installed. It can be used to connect to both Terminal Services and Remote Desktop. Once connected you can do anything remotely that you could if you were sitting at the machine with two very important exceptions:.

If the machine is truly physically remote from you then you will not be able to do things like insert a CD-ROM or other physical things. Windows must be running which implies that you cannot remote-desktop to the boot sequence or to change BIOS settings. As I mentioned earlier, you can happily use remote desktop across the internet as long as the server is not protected by a firewall such as a broadband router.

If it is and your firewall or router supports it you can open port on the firewall and forward that to the machine you want to connect to. Note that if there is more than one machine behind the firewall then only one can be connected to across the firewall this way. Subscribe to Confident Computing! Less frustration and more confidence, solutions, answers, and tips in your inbox every week.

If you are running through a router, then that router will have to open port and send it to the computer behind the router you want to connect to. How can you connect to more than one machine behind the firewall?

Can you change the default port on the 2nd machine? If so, how can you change it on the remote computer in order to still get to computer 1 when you want to. You can have different machines listen on different ports, and then open those ports across the firewall. Does this question make sense? Should work great. Pro will let you connect TO it remotely. Home will not. That make sense? Is there any way i can turn on my computer from a different computer in a different house hold?

I think the practical answer right now is probably not. You can be logged in in multiple sessions, but only one can be accessed, via console or remote desktop session, at a time. Thanks for the pointer. Sounds like my setup here at home, yet I can see my own server. Resolving your domain name probably works, but then routing it back to your server is where it may get confused. That site would be visible only from your local lan, but could get you to your content.

Are both machines in the same location? If so, hook them both up to the router and whatever the speed it supports should work. I tried to connect my xp with remote desktop, but a error message occur everytime, the client could not be connected, remote connection might not be enabled …. I have 1 XP home and 1 XP pro at home.

They are connected together with a cable router connected to the internet. I want to connect to these 2 pcs from work. How do I specify the location of my pcs at home? Do I need a static one? Please help! Can I access an account from another computer on the network if the account being accessed is on a computer that is turned off?

One of my computers keeps randomly shutting off, and I want to be able to use one of the accounts I have on it. What I can resolve this?? Does it wake the monitor up if its asleep? If the monitor is on, could anyone see what I was doing on the PC? If someone were already logged onto that computer, what notification do they get if I disconnect them, does it just bump them back to the logon screen without warning?

I have remote desktop enabled on my home computer, and I am able to use it remotly from other machines, except for one, my office computer, I am using Windows with service pack 4. I am behind a corporate firewall that uses a proxy for internet access with an http type addressing.

My problem is when I start the remote desktop web connection I can see that I am going somewhere I see a white space and do not get my home computer logon screen. What did I not do right? As mentioned in the article, you need to have port on the router forwarded to the machine you want to connect to.

I would like to access the office pc remotely by using a dial up line to the office pc. Is there any way i can access my laptop running windows xp home remotely using my pda??

I m using a wireless adsl router which both my pda and my laptop are connected wirelessly.. Hello, I have xp on my office machine which has a Connecting OUT to a machine using remote desktop typically just works. Do I just make something up at random? I guess I could randomly try all the settings. I am trying to connect two computers via a modem. Is it possible for them to speak via a modem and not have internet access?

They are both running XP Home. I am able to look at files and access them through file sharing but I want to be able to take control and actually run programs using remote desktop. I am under the impression that remote desktop server only comes with XP Pro. Is there a way to make both of them able to be the host using XP Home? Not for remote desktop, no. You do need Pro, as you say. This conversation is currently closed to new comments. The deault port that XP listens on is You need to setup a staic port forward on you router to forward all inbound TCP request on port to the internal IP address of your XP machine.

Can you access the XP machine when your laptop is connected to the internal network? If answer three is true ie XP home does not have remote terminal services you might try using VNC freeware. Its available for download from sourceforge. If you're asking for technical help, please be sure to include all your system info, including operating system, model number, and any other specifics related to the problem. Also please exercise your best judgment when posting in the forums--revealing personal information such as your e-mail address, telephone number, and address is not recommended.

Please note: Do not post advertisements, offensive material, profanity, or personal attacks. Please remember to be considerate of other members. Reverse bind shell is very effective to evade default firewall settings, this is because the default firewall setting is usually allow everything from the trusted zone to the untrusted zone and block unsolicited traffic from untrusted zone to the trusted zone. This is a lab setup for VA and pentest learning and practising, in actual scenario it is not as direct as this one.

Exploit is useless without payload, a payload is the thing you want to do to a target victim machine. I gained a shell there are countless of things I can do, it is very useful to learn the powershell and command prompt net or netsh command.

Metasploit framework is actually used for building and testing exploits where security researchers do not need to reinvent the wheel to test their discovered exploits, however it is also a great tool for pentesting since it has huge and frequently updated exploit database. A simple Windows firewall is sufficient to block this kind of attack, as firewall default behaviour is all unsolicited traffic from untrusted to trusted is blocked.



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