
Unknown User in Office 365 called "Package_" Cloud Computing & SaaS.With all of those Google Meet / Zoom / Teams sessions under your belt, we bet you have some opinions on how to make t.
and you've supported the hardware that enables them.
Tell us about webcams and video conferencing systems for 75 points! SpiceworksĬhances are, you've been on a lot of video meetings over the past couple of years. Our others are Windows Server 2016, without fail. If I remember correctly, that is to soon come to an end. Some of our servers (not all of them are physical) are running Windows Server 2012 R2. Greetings Spiceheads,I require a bit of advice, please. How can I upgrade Windows Servers? Windows. Anyhow, what else was I going to do with a day off? On This Day – Ma. Spark! Pro Series - 23rd March 2023 Spiceworks OriginalsĪ stand-in Spark! today, covering for the overworked and underpaid jimender2 who is up to his knees in far flung servers and is therefore unable to enlighten us with usual erudition. Does it hang? Does it give you an error? Does your Mac catch fire or explode?Ĥ) What SonicWALL device are you connecting to? What firmware does it run? What version of NetExtender are you using to connect? Have you tried a different netextender version? Is your Mac OS up to date?ĥ) Have you tried looking at the SonicWALL's logs while you're trying to connect from the Mac? Perhaps there will be something in the logs to indicate why it's failing. When you say it doesn't work, we need to know what does happen when you try to connect. If it was a Windows 7 PC, I'd say make sure the network setting is set to Home or Work instead of Public.ģ) Saying you "can't" connect doesn't tell us anything. Perhaps it's on the local cable-provider's wifi, or that of a neighbor, instead of your own actual home network?Ģ) Perhaps your Mac is running some kind of software firewall, and it's on a stricter setting for the home network than for everything else? i.e. So, technically speaking, at first read this makes absolutely no sense.Ī few things come to mind to inves-tigger-ate (been reading too many children's books):ġ) The description makes me think your Mac isn't really on the same network as your PC.
Hypothetically, if your home PC works, then it's not your network, but if your Mac connects via the cell, then it's not the Mac, it's the network.
So, your home PC connects fine, but your home Mac fails to connect, except when you connect that Mac via your cell phone, then the Mac connects fine.