- #DELL SONICWALL FOR MAC INSTALL#
- #DELL SONICWALL FOR MAC UPDATE#
- #DELL SONICWALL FOR MAC PRO#
- #DELL SONICWALL FOR MAC PC#
- #DELL SONICWALL FOR MAC MAC#
Some routers have a white list and a black list to allow some access. Not sure you can allow only these websites, unless you use some type of parental controls on each system. Example: if you put 31.13.69.80 in the address bar, you get to Facebook. The problem with trying to block everything, except the websites listed above, if you know the correct IP Address, you can get past the keyword blocking. Having them sign the Policy, helps to control some problems. I work for a company that has an Internet Policy that we have to sign. You can make a Policy and edit it to suit your needs.ĭoing the above gives them access during the hours you mentioned. You should be able to see Access Restrictions.
#DELL SONICWALL FOR MAC MAC#
Smartphones and wireless printers usually have the Mac address listed. If you need Mac Addresses from each system, you can always run an ipconfig /all log and the Mac address for the adapter will be listed.
#DELL SONICWALL FOR MAC UPDATE#
If you have everything connected at the time you do this, you click on update Mac Address List and everything will show that is connected. I click on edit Mac Filter List, then I see the Mac Addresses of some of the devices. If you have a wireless printer, smartphone or other wireless devices, you will need to add these to the list. I then click on Permit only PC's listed to access the wireless network. Click on enable, The you should see something similar below. If you did not change the default password, I suggest you do this so no one can change your settings.Ĭlick on wireless and look for wireless Mac Address Filtering, it's probably disabled. I have a Linksys, so you should have something similar on your system. This works great for blocking other wireless devices, like smart phones, making them use their data. They still would connect to the router, but have no internet. Doing this, that way if the person finds out the password. You find out the Mac Addresses of both the computers and tell your router to permit ONLY PC's listed. If both of the computers connect to the network, then it's setup correctly. The big problem is that old printers were never removed from the print server, the IPs were re-used. There's a lot of them, which isn't the big problem. I just started a new job and am finding there's a lot of housekeeping to be done, including printers. In that Spirit, today debuts the first DIY Spark. Year now, and one thing is abundantly clear, Ricky Nelson was correct in his I have been writing Spark once every two weeks for over a
#DELL SONICWALL FOR MAC PRO#
#DELL SONICWALL FOR MAC PC#
Was RDP on the old PC configured to listen on a different port number than the default?īeyond that, you need to get a better understanding of how your network is setup. Control Panel, Programs and Features, Turn Windows Features On/Off, select Telnet client from the list.)Ĭan you telnet to port 3389 on the IP address of the new machine? If not, Remote Desktop isn't enabled or something is blocking it like Windows or your Antivirus's firewall.Ĭan you RDP to it from within your network? Leave the Sonicwall out of the equation until at least this works.
#DELL SONICWALL FOR MAC INSTALL#
(And we're assuming the replacement PC has a Pro version of Windows and not Home)ĭoes the user account you are using a member of the Remote Desktop group on the PC? (Select Users button on the same page where you enable Remote Desktop.)Ĭan you telnet to the IP address of the PC? (If Telnet isn't installed on your computer, install it. Maybe you mean IP address?Īre Remote Desktop connections enabled on the PC? It's not by default. Sonicwall has nothing to do with the MAC address as far as this is concerned.