Thank you for your informative video. I have a question: If I work for a company remotely and they dont allow you to be outside the US and they have a system that can detect if you're using a vpn, is there a way I can connect directly to my home connection in the states without them knowing I'm outside of the states for the moment? Or is there a way I can hide my out of the state location and show that I'm in the states when I'm working? Please help, I have a family emergency and they won't give me the time off and I need to go out of the country for at least a month.
hey thats was a good video, really enjoyed it. i have a test lab and i was hoping to setup a remote access vpn but not having luck with it, Can you help me out with router configures to set this up.
Remote Access VPNs are configured on the firewall. You wouldn't configured it on the Router. At least I haven't seen it done on the router. It's always been done on the firewall
A site to site VPN is when you want to connect remote sites together over a public network. If you have users at a branch site wanting to access resources at your Data Center, you don't want to require your users to connect to the VPN while at work. They should only have to connect to the VPN when they are at home or some other remote space away from the office but still want access to resources at the Data Center
Network Prodigy thanks for clarifying. Are there any speed/bandwidth benefits to site to site? I work from home and currently use ARD or mount NAS every day to push and pull files. I have a ubuiquiti router so wondering if there would be any benefit to set up a site to site from my home.
@@kurtkeaner You don't get any speed benefits from implementing a site to site. The site to site is just a tunnel that you build between two routers or two firewalls. So for example, if I was building a GRE Tunnel between two routers. Even if I made the tunnel 10G, I won't get 10G over the tunnel if the physical ports connecting to the internet only support 1G. If that makes sense. So the site to site won't increase your speeds. Just allows you to have connectivity between two sites over a network that you normally wouldn't like the internet.
I don't believe site to site tunnels and remove access vpn tunnels are covered on the CCNP Enterprise Core, but they could be covered on the CCNP Security core. I know for a fact they are covered on the new CCNA
Totally worth the time you spend to watch this video!
Man, You are really good!!! I have been watching Technical Videos for a while, but, your have to be the absolute best....and I can understand you!!!!
This was a great video, informative and easy to understand. Thanks for the visual depictions also, just wondering about DMVPNs...
DMVPN will be done for you
'We are valuable'... Y'all aight, I guess...
- A Sys Admin/Engineer LOL
Thanks for the wonderful video and explanation. Keep up the great work
respect to you sir very clear teaching. keep it going.
Nice video...explianed in simple language with eamples. Please make a video on different between IPSEC and SSL VPN
I will make sure to do a video describing the two
Brilliant explanation. Thanks
Very nice explanation. Subscribed!
Thank you for your informative video. I have a question: If I work for a company remotely and they dont allow you to be outside the US and they have a system that can detect if you're using a vpn, is there a way I can connect directly to my home connection in the states without them knowing I'm outside of the states for the moment? Or is there a way I can hide my out of the state location and show that I'm in the states when I'm working? Please help, I have a family emergency and they won't give me the time off and I need to go out of the country for at least a month.
Nice video. Very informative. Thanks
hey thats was a good video, really enjoyed it. i have a test lab and i was hoping to setup a remote access vpn but not having luck with it, Can you help me out with router configures to set this up.
Remote Access VPNs are configured on the firewall. You wouldn't configured it on the Router. At least I haven't seen it done on the router. It's always been done on the firewall
thanks for the great explanation. why would anyone use a site to site VPN? seems like remote access can do the same thing with more flexibility
A site to site VPN is when you want to connect remote sites together over a public network. If you have users at a branch site wanting to access resources at your Data Center, you don't want to require your users to connect to the VPN while at work. They should only have to connect to the VPN when they are at home or some other remote space away from the office but still want access to resources at the Data Center
Network Prodigy thanks for clarifying. Are there any speed/bandwidth benefits to site to site? I work from home and currently use ARD or mount NAS every day to push and pull files. I have a ubuiquiti router so wondering if there would be any benefit to set up a site to site from my home.
@@kurtkeaner You don't get any speed benefits from implementing a site to site. The site to site is just a tunnel that you build between two routers or two firewalls. So for example, if I was building a GRE Tunnel between two routers. Even if I made the tunnel 10G, I won't get 10G over the tunnel if the physical ports connecting to the internet only support 1G. If that makes sense. So the site to site won't increase your speeds. Just allows you to have connectivity between two sites over a network that you normally wouldn't like the internet.
Perfect! Thanks are you talking about core exam"?
I don't believe site to site tunnels and remove access vpn tunnels are covered on the CCNP Enterprise Core, but they could be covered on the CCNP Security core. I know for a fact they are covered on the new CCNA
Awesome video! Thanks for sharing. Are. you on twitter (would love to follow you)?
Ty