PROBLEMAS CON EL ESCRITORIO REMOTO

27/10/2004 - 10:47 por Anonimo | Informe spam
Hola a todos pues despues de habilitar en el router el puerto 3389 para
escritorio remoto, no puedo conectarme me da un error como si hubiera otra
conexion ya abierta y no hay ninguna conexion mas y en el equipo esta
configurado para que acepte las conexiones remotas, no se que se me esta
escapando.

Un saludo y gracias

Preguntas similare

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#1 Anonimo
27/10/2004 - 11:04 | Informe spam
Hi,
Remote desktop no atraviesa nat. Lo mas cercano...asistencia remota desde msn messenger a partir de 6.2


Saludos

JessFi

jessfi at msn dot com
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#2 Anonimo
27/10/2004 - 11:15 | Informe spam
Pues creo que te equivocas porque aun compañero le funciona, se puede
conectar desde el portatil al pc de casa perfectamente haciendo NAT

Un saludo y gracias

"𺰘¨Jessica Fisherman¨˜°ºð" wrote:

Hi,
Remote desktop no atraviesa nat. Lo mas cercano...asistencia remota desde msn messenger a partir de 6.2


Saludos

JessFi

jessfi at msn dot com


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#3 Anonimo
27/10/2004 - 11:48 | Informe spam
Hi,
Opss
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/pr....mspx#EFAA
Using Remote Assistance with NAT Devices
What is NAT?

Network Address Translation is an Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) standard used to allow multiple PCs or devices on a private network (using private address ranges such as 10.0.x.x, 192.168.x.x, 172.x.x.x) to share a single, globally routable IPv4 address. A main reason NAT is often deployed is because IPv4—the current generation of the Internet—addresses are getting scarce.

NAT is used in gateway devices that form the boundary between the public Internet and the private LAN. As IP packets from the private LAN traverse the gateway, NAT translates a private IP address and port number to a public IP address and port number, tracking those translations to keep individual sessions intact. Internet Connection Sharing in the Windows XP and Windows Me operating systems, along with many Internet gateway devices use NAT, particularly to connect to broadband networks such via DSL or cable modems. The use of NAT is increasing dramatically as more homes and small businesses network their PCs and share a connection to the Internet.

Remote Assistance and NAT

Remote Assistance supports UPnP to Traverse NAT devices, allowing connections through NAT devices unless both the Novice and Expert are behind a non-UPnP NAT device. At this time, Windows XP Internet Connection Sharing supports UPnP.

Here's how Remote Assistance works with UPnP:

1.
Remote Assistance will detect the Public Internet IP address and TCP Port number on the UPnP NAT device and insert the address into the Remote Assistance ticket.

2.
The Public Internet Address and TCP Port number will be used to connect through the NAT device by the Expert or Novice workstation to establish a Remote Assistance session.

3.
The Remote Assistance connection request will then be forwarded to the client by the NAT device.


Note: Remote Assistance will not connect when the Novice is behind a non-UPnP NAT device when e-mail is used to send the invitation file. When sending an invitation using Windows Messenger, a non-UPnP NAT device will work if one client is behind a NAT device. If both expert and novice computers are behind Non-UPnP NAT devices then the Remote Assistance connection will fail.

There are several NAT Networking companies that are looking into supporting UPnP by the end of this year. Table 1 below shows Remote Assistance connections that work through NAT devices. Note: Windows 2000 ICS does not support UPnP.

Saludos


JessFi

jessfi at msn dot com
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#4 Anonimo
27/10/2004 - 14:47 | Informe spam
Lo siento pero no me das una solucion que me pueda ayudar, o yo estoy muy
espeso

Un saludo y gracias

"𺰘¨Jessica Fisherman¨˜°ºð" wrote:

Hi,
Opss
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/pr....mspx#EFAA
Using Remote Assistance with NAT Devices
What is NAT?

Network Address Translation is an Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) standard used to allow multiple PCs or devices on a private network (using private address ranges such as 10.0.x.x, 192.168.x.x, 172.x.x.x) to share a single, globally routable IPv4 address. A main reason NAT is often deployed is because IPv4—the current generation of the Internet—addresses are getting scarce.

NAT is used in gateway devices that form the boundary between the public Internet and the private LAN. As IP packets from the private LAN traverse the gateway, NAT translates a private IP address and port number to a public IP address and port number, tracking those translations to keep individual sessions intact. Internet Connection Sharing in the Windows XP and Windows Me operating systems, along with many Internet gateway devices use NAT, particularly to connect to broadband networks such via DSL or cable modems. The use of NAT is increasing dramatically as more homes and small businesses network their PCs and share a connection to the Internet.

Remote Assistance and NAT

Remote Assistance supports UPnP to Traverse NAT devices, allowing connections through NAT devices unless both the Novice and Expert are behind a non-UPnP NAT device. At this time, Windows XP Internet Connection Sharing supports UPnP.

Here's how Remote Assistance works with UPnP:

1.
Remote Assistance will detect the Public Internet IP address and TCP Port number on the UPnP NAT device and insert the address into the Remote Assistance ticket.

2.
The Public Internet Address and TCP Port number will be used to connect through the NAT device by the Expert or Novice workstation to establish a Remote Assistance session.

3.
The Remote Assistance connection request will then be forwarded to the client by the NAT device.


Note: Remote Assistance will not connect when the Novice is behind a non-UPnP NAT device when e-mail is used to send the invitation file. When sending an invitation using Windows Messenger, a non-UPnP NAT device will work if one client is behind a NAT device. If both expert and novice computers are behind Non-UPnP NAT devices then the Remote Assistance connection will fail.

There are several NAT Networking companies that are looking into supporting UPnP by the end of this year. Table 1 below shows Remote Assistance connections that work through NAT devices. Note: Windows 2000 ICS does not support UPnP.

Saludos


JessFi

jessfi at msn dot com


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#5 eduardo fernandez
27/10/2004 - 15:37 | Informe spam
mira aqui:
http://www.microsoft.com/spain/wind...efault.asp
introduccion a la conexion remota: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/q300546/
configurar xp para conexion remota: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/301527
habilitar Asistencia remota: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/q305608/

"@@@" <@@@@discussions.microsoft.com> escribió en el mensaje
news:
Hola a todos pues despues de habilitar en el router el puerto 3389 para
escritorio remoto, no puedo conectarme me da un error como si hubiera otra
conexion ya abierta y no hay ninguna conexion mas y en el equipo esta
configurado para que acepte las conexiones remotas, no se que se me esta
escapando.

Un saludo y gracias
Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
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