: 4 Check the Nortel VPN documentation! It probably is installing a
: device driver for encrypting and tunneling of the TCP/IP data.  Is
: there any possible client side configuration that can be done?  (The
: problem may be a desired "Security" feature)

Good point.  A problem can be that lots of corporate VPN nowdays
does all the configuration at the head-end, so that users at home
or at remote sites, can't configure it to screw up the corporate
firewall.

But... one way the corporation could configure your head end is
to allow the client to continue to send and receive TCP/IP to
"private" addresses (ie, 10.x.x.x or 192.168.x.x).  If it's
allowed, it's certainly the simplest way.  But often it's either
not allowed, or not practical (eg if there are private addresses
in your corporate web you need to access).

Something to check out, though.


Wayne Throop   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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