@JaredBusch said in Problem with Nginx conf file:
proxy_pass http://10.254.0.38;
Shouldn't it say:
proxy_pass https://10.254.0.38;
(https vs http) Since you're going to a SSL site?
@JaredBusch said in Problem with Nginx conf file:
proxy_pass http://10.254.0.38;
Shouldn't it say:
proxy_pass https://10.254.0.38;
(https vs http) Since you're going to a SSL site?
Text messages...
Before porting my business number to Vitelity, I was using Google Voice. Customers could text me on the Google Voice number and would get the texts and could text them back.
Since porting to Vitelity, I enabled SMS to email. Is there a better way of getting text messages forwarded to my cell phone?
I would like to know what VoIP phones are your go to phones and why.
I have a Yealink T46G and there is a bug that when the screen goes dark the message waiting indicator blinks red. The bug has been there since I got the phone about 6 months ago. I updated the firmware last night. That fixed a problem where every missed call was listed twice, but not the indicator thing.
I can't imagine rolling a bunch of these phones to a client with the bugs this phone has had, but I don't know what a better phone would be.
What page does it land on after they log in? What if they try to go straight to:
https://rdsserver.yourdomain.com/RDWeb/Pages/en-US/Default.aspx
Are the workstations that are connecting domain joined? What if you're logged on to one of those machines with a local account and then try to hit the page?
@JaredBusch said in Edge won't print:
When is the last time you used Edge? I find it is better than IE, and almost as good as Chrome and Firefox for normal website functionality.
Today was the last time I ran in to a site that wouldn't work in Edge. Two different sites. One was a NYS site. The second was ControlCenterX from libdata.com
As more and more of my clients are using cloud based applications that rely on a browser, I find myself creating desktop icons that open a particular browser for a particular site. The least compatible browser is Edge. Chrome usually wins, but I have a few sites that need Internet Explorer. Once I figure out which browser the site works in, I copy the browser icon and rename it to the site name. Then in properties, I paste the url on the end of the command line. It's quick and if they change their default browser, the site will still open in the browser I specified.
Thanks for sharing. I hope it saves others from making a similar mistake. I know I probably would have done just what you did.
and on the Meraki side, you chose WPA2 Enterprise, correct?
Check your network policy. It should look like this:
The window title says "Properties for multiple items" What types of items did you select? Are they all the same type of user account?
On the other hand, old data can be very useful for architect/engineering type companies. They may not store the project records forever, but the drawings have value. In that case the space on a server to store an old drawing compared to a current one is laughable since the file sizes keep increasing.
I have a client that only has Windows 7 machines. Since Windows 7 doesn't have all the tools to manage Hyper-v 2016, I was looking at 3rd party managers. Does any one have one they really like? I was going to try 5nine today. Are there others I should look at?
I would poke around it long enough to figure out if the server had been logged in to, or if a user's computer encrypted all the files. You don't want it coming right back. Like others said, figure out how it got infected and then restore back before the infection.
@scottalanmiller said in NYC Mango Meetup June 2017:
Flights are getting cheap. I found $89 to NOLA.
I heard the airlines are beating each other up for customers. Or maybe it was the airlines are beating their customers. I can't remember.
@momurda said in Restoring SBS after cryptoware infection:
Wasnt there an SBS version where the only way to join a doimain was using IE on a client?
With SBS, you can do things the "normal" way, but if you use their tools like the dashboard, it does some extra stuff in the background. For example, if you run the web based join program, it sets your DNS statically so that the server is the first DNS server. This is useful if your router is doing DHCP and you can't turn it off. It helps someone that is not a full time admin take care of the basics.
@jrc Don't I want the legit robots to hit my site and see that it's not running .netNuke anymore so the script kiddies will leave the site alone?
Where was that taken? I mean there are stacks of computers with 5 1/4" drives next to it.
@IRJ said in A Small Orange - bandwidth limit exceded:
There are also plenty of FREE plugins that do this with one click.
https://wordpress.org/plugins/rename-wp-login/
https://wordpress.org/plugins/protect-wp-admin/
Wordfence also lets you do this and restrict IPs to the admin page.
I'm trying to make this as the solution to the problem. The other tools weren't telling me what was going on because they were showing me what pages were served, not what pages were asked for an unresolved. WordFence was able to show me that spammers were trying to register through .aspx pages that the old .netNuke site used. By banning those pages, my bandwidth consumption has gone down. I'm curious to see how long they have to get 404s before they will stop making requests.
The o365 protection has been about as good as the Barracuda filter we had in the past, but easier to manage. I don't think none at all is reasonable anymore.