Right. In case you were not already familiar, most firewalls simply
block all in-bound traffic unless it's in response to some outbound
traffic. So if you make a request via your web browser, the response
from the web server is allowed back in. If some random snooper comes
knocking they get not
Hi Gabriele,
You’re right, Skype is a good idea. It has NAT traversal built-in. It will
save you a lot of work.
Let’s say you’re insane and decide to do this the hard way anyway. Basically
what you have to do is tell the box that manages your Internet connection to
knock a hole in its firew
Hi Sabahattin, yes, my ip starts with a 192.168...
I'll try throw Skype.
Gabriel.
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It’s fair to say that this is a hard problem to solve and sadly, even in the
best case, it’s needlessly complicated. Thank our industry for not getting off
their collective bottoms and giving people proper connectivity to the Internet
that allows them to run servers of their choice and particip
This makes it difficult because you and they are probably behind a
firewall which is going to stop you from directly connecting to each
other. You might be better off trying to use some chat app like the
built-in messages, Adium or Skype and using their file transfer
facilities. Even then, depe
> Il giorno 25/ago/2015, alle ore 16:21, Scott Granados
> ha scritto:
>
> FTP or SCP are probably your friends here.
>
> Enable an ftpd or sshd server on the destination side, create a user and copy
> files using that user.
> If the computers are on the same network segment just use NFS
If the other machine has "remote login" turned on in sharing and it's
not behind a firewall then you should be able to use the sftp command
from terminal to connect to the other machine and "put" the file
directly. Many of the chat clients also support direct peer to peer file
transfers.
CB
Mail drop won’t do it.
The limit is 5GB.
With Best regards,
Sadam Ahmed
Blog:
Http://www.SadamAhmed.com
Sent using OS X Mail
> On 26 Aug 2015, at 12:18 AM, Tyler Thompson wrote:
>
> If you want to do it with terminal you could use ftp. But you may find that
> it is possible
FTP or SCP are probably your friends here.
Enable an ftpd or sshd server on the destination side, create a user and copy
files using that user.
If the computers are on the same network segment just use NFS or
Apple’s networking support and copy the file.
Bottom line you have the
If you want to do it with terminal you could use ftp. But you may find that it
is possible to email this file (using mac mail). I’m not sure of your operating
system but a while back apple put in mail drop to help with incredibly large
files. I’m not sure if it’ll accommodate 10 gigs but it may
Hi all.
Is it possible to transfer a very large file, about 10 GB, from a mac
computer to another one, via the internet, maybe using some terminal
command?
I am lookingfor a solution which doesn't include a third party service
like iCloud, Dropbox or whatever.
Thanks for any info.
Gabriel.
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