Just found your channel. I’ve been studying for a career transition to Cyber Security for about two years and this video was the most engaging and entertaining way of teaching a concept and you have a subscriber because of it. I will definitely tell others about your channel!
How does one measure the roaming overlap of 15-20%? If I have an aimesh system, how do I know that it's optimized with that 15-20% overlap, to prevent sticky client issues?
Either disable port forwarding on the router after you no longer need it OR assign the device a fixed static IP on the router's end so that its internal DHCP won't assign that IP to any device that doesn't match it's MAC. 2nd method is just a stop-gap thing, 1st method always better
Be careful. Opening even just a single port in your network can make it vulnarable for attackers, especially if the port you're exposing to the internet is known to be prone for attackers. (e.g. 445, 23, 22, 5900, 3389)
Port Forwarding is difficult and Dangerous! use Cloudflare Tunnel or Self host: RVPN with authelia (WireGuard) or Headscale/Tailscale, Yggdrasil, SirTunnel (similar to ngrok)Tailscale.
Port forwarding is required for a bunch of things. VPN does not solve everything. Making blanket statement like this makes more damage than this tutorial. Edit: This is in reply to the original comment.
at this point, Asus should pay you, you give more complete and understandable explanation than theirs
The best explanation I've found on this topic!
Glad you like it. Thanks.
Just found your channel. I’ve been studying for a career transition to Cyber Security for about two years and this video was the most engaging and entertaining way of teaching a concept and you have a subscriber because of it. I will definitely tell others about your channel!
Glad it was helpful and thanks for subscribing! 🙏🏻
Thanks for your efforts in visualizing and explaining it in a simple manner. Keep up the good work.
Glad you liked it!
Excellent explanation!
Thanks, glad you liked it!
thank you i spent so long time looking for this
Very Nice explanation & Interesting too- Thanks allot
Glad you liked it, thanks 👍🏻
Thank's for sharing knowledge. 🤓
Thanks for watching 🙂
What are your thoughts on ZeroTier? - You can access your router from outside the LAN without having to open any ports.
excellente!
Thanks!
Now I understand 👏
Glad to hear that 🙂
Brilliant explanation👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻Thank you✌
Thanks 🙂
Ha Ha where is your "Twin" brother? Haven't seen him for such a long time! I missed him!😜😂🤣😆
Haha he might come back 😂😜
Excellent video.
Thanks, glad you liked it!
Great , keep it up .
How does one measure the roaming overlap of 15-20%? If I have an aimesh system, how do I know that it's optimized with that 15-20% overlap, to prevent sticky client issues?
very good sln
Either disable port forwarding on the router after you no longer need it OR assign the device a fixed static IP on the router's end so that its internal DHCP won't assign that IP to any device that doesn't match it's MAC. 2nd method is just a stop-gap thing, 1st method always better
I like this funny animations!
Glad you liked it :)
Actually I also like this animation. Love it
thanks
you're welcome
Good animation explaination 😂
Thanks :D
Love you
Be careful. Opening even just a single port in your network can make it vulnarable for attackers, especially if the port you're exposing to the internet is known to be prone for attackers. (e.g. 445, 23, 22, 5900, 3389)
Port Forwarding is difficult and Dangerous! use Cloudflare Tunnel or Self host: RVPN with authelia (WireGuard) or Headscale/Tailscale, Yggdrasil, SirTunnel (similar to ngrok)Tailscale.
pfSense can run Wireguard on the same system, easiest solution, and very little loss in speeds.
Port forwarding is required for a bunch of things. VPN does not solve everything. Making blanket statement like this makes more damage than this tutorial.
Edit: This is in reply to the original comment.
i love your videos man funny and full of information can you cover this plugin (((Yazfi))) for asus router it great tool to guest wifi and openvpn
Thanks for the suggestion :)