If you want to connect through your corporate network, you should talk to the network administrator about it, they know how to do it. There are SL versions supporting SOCKS5. About installing Second Life on corporate PCs, talk to the system administrator about it in before, they want to know and there might be policies not allowing those. Myself being administrator, I would prefer if the users would use tunneling to their home network, preferably SSH or http-tunnel over SSL. Traffic would originate from the home network of the user then, not from the corporation. The most preferable solution to that issue though would be, if you bring your own notebook using a 3G UMTS/HDSPA or other wireless-modem to connect to the internet. That way the corporate network would be isolated and unaffected by your experiments. There is a reason the corporate network is proxified instead of just NAT routed.
Am 15.07.2011 04:17, schrieb a...@skyhighway.com: > Hey y'all, i had something i wanted to do at work a coupla days ago that i > coulda used SL for. It installed, but i couldn't get it to connect. Is > there some kinda proxy setting that i need to fix to get SL to start from > where i work? They have a proxy server there that all external traffic > has to go through. i know i have to tell Firefox& everything else about > it all the time to get them to work. i looked in the XML but didn't see > anything inspiring in the little bit of time i had for it. > > The thing i have to do is just a dumb test, but SL is a pretty good thing > to do it with, and an excuse to spend maybe 10 whole minutes doing SL from > work about once a week. _______________________________________________ Policies and (un)subscribe information available here: http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/OpenSource-Dev Please read the policies before posting to keep unmoderated posting privileges