RDP connect to local host

April 10th, 2011

It is possible to have concurrent users on XP by adjusting the terminal services settings. Once that is done it is also possible to have multiple RDP connections to the local host (the same computer).

I found that information at:

http://www.mydigitallife.info/2008/06/13/workaround-for-remote-desktop-client-to-connect-to-localhost-local-terminal-server-service/

That article lists 3 ways to get it to work. The way I would expect to use is:

Workaround 2: Connect to RDC Terminal Services at Different Non Standard Port

Another workaround to the blockage of local host Remote Desktop connection in Windows XP is to connect to localhost (127.0.0.1) address on another port other than the default (3389). The hack is especially useful in Windows XP SP2 and SP3 where 127.0.0.2 forwarding IP address for localhost connection no longer work. By default, Remote Desktop listens and connects on port 3389. See the guide to change default Remote Desktop Terminal Services listening port, and how to connect using non-default port in Remote Desktop Connection.

That second link basically says:

For example, to connect to port 7777 on a computer that is named “remote.computer”, type the following information into the Computer box in Remote Desktop Connection as shown in the illustration:

remote.computer:7777

Or, I would say in the RDP GUI computer name box put <computername:portnumber>. Of course, that port has to be open in the first place.

I haven’t tested any of this out, I’m just keeping it for the future.

This relates to my problems with using AutoIt3 scripts on some programs while not interfering with current work on the same computer.

PPTP connects but no ping

March 7th, 2011

I was having this terrible problem with connecting to the office router via PPTP. It would say connected but I couldn’t ping the office router or any office computers.

Thanks to http://en.kioskea.net/forum/affich-67204-vpn-connects-but-no-remote-lan-access

I did, to quote one of the commenters:

I had a similar issue… What I had to do was tell the connection to not use the remote gateway to connect through internet. On the XP machine (works on Vista and 7 also) go to the properties of the VPN connection. Click on the Networking tab and double click Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4). Click Advanced and uncheck the box for “Use default gateway on remote network.” This will route all of your local traffic through whatever network you’re locally connected to, and any remote traffic through the VPN connection. This also assumes that you’re not trying to route your internet traffic through the VPN. If you leave this option set, then you will not be able to access any local network resources without manually specifiying routes to get to them. This is the default design of VPN :D . I know this post is old, but I figured I’d put in what I discovered it to be, maybe it can help somebody down the road.

Yeah!!! Through the hoop!

Now if I could just figure out why the Cisco QuickVPN client won’t connect I’d be all cool.

Windows 7 network map to a folder

March 7th, 2011

I had an older program that in XP would see mapped network drives but in Windows 7 something is different and the old program wouldn’t recognize mapped drives. Now I’m more bald than when I began but I found a solution to the problem.

Vista and Win 7 have a dos command called mklink. This command can create a symbolic link to a folder.

mklink /d \MyDocs \Users\User1\Documents

Where /d creates a symbolic link

\MyDocs is the destination name of the link (which will have a folder icon)

and \Users\User1\Documents is the source (could be \\10.44.333.3\Folder\Folder2)

Once I set up one of these my problem program still wouldn’t entirely accept it but if I just typed in a little extra folder information in the box … well it took it right away!

mklink will also create hard links and directory junctions but those can be problematic in many ways, even mess up backup routines (I had a hard link which caused the Rsync backup routine to actually randomly delete files in the linked folder).


Poweredge 2600 orange blinking light

January 13th, 2011

Great series of posts about the blinking orange light problem

usb drive or device
battery
bent pens on usb
many more

http://www.johnlamansky.com/blog/a-blinking-orange-power-light/

Example of video sales

July 17th, 2010

http://www.thewayofthehappywoman.com/