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This page lists the most common frequently asked questions about eduroam in the UK. The table of contents summarises the questions asked; please scroll down to the relevant section for the answer. Contents: 1) Policy Scope of provision of eduroam services to users 2) Business Case Objections We already provide free public Wi-Fi, don't see the case for eduroam? Our users don't roam, the benefit of global Wi-Fi roaming is not important to us 3) Schools Participation
Terms and Conditions relating to ac.uk domain name registration 1  Introduction
Sometimes users are invited to join a multi-party conference which is being hosted on an MCU (Multi-Point Control Unit) not operated by Vscene. If this is the case, you will probably be given an IP address (looking like 90.213.23.227) or a GDS number (which looks like an international phone number e.g. 0035 276 192476) and also a PIN to access the conference once you have connected to the MCU. How to book the conference In this example, we will be making a booking that connects to a conference with ID 12345 on an MCU with an IP address of 11.12.13.14.
IP ADDRESSES AND PORTS USED BY Vscene In the situation where a codec/endpoint is sitting behind a firewall or router with ACL’s,the following IP addresses and ports will need to be accessible to it in order for it to usethe Vscene's Vidyo Gateways, gatekeepers & SIP registrars. H.323: Vscene GATEKEEPERS 194.80.134.34 (Primary GK) 194.80.134.67 (Secondary GK) TCP          1719 to 65535 UDP        1719 to 65535
The Starleaf GT Mini and PT Mini was recently evaluated by our advisers based at University of Edinburgh. The full report can be found on the community site at this link. Starleaf's response to the evaluation can be found at this link.
Janet Videoconferencing provides an array of useful services to allow anyone in the academic or research sector to hold effective reliable videoconferences between local sites, other institutions and even internationally. This is all provided at no cost to state funded institutions.
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Information and Guidelines on Logfiles LINX Best Current Practice – Traceability: https://www.linx.net/good/bcp/traceability-bcp-v1_0.html Information Commissioner’s Employee Monitoring code: http://www.ico.gov.uk/upload/documents/library/data_protection/detailed_specialist_guides/employment_practices_code.pdf
There may come a time when you may require to sinkhole or block some domains. One of the easiest way of doing this is within your DNS infrastructure by making your DNS Resolvers authoritative for the domains that you wish to block. Within your BIND configuration file which on Debian based systems is normally located at /etc/bind/named.conf.local you will need to specify which domains you want to block. named.conf.local //// Do any local configuration here//
How to block or sinkhole domains on Windows server 2008 DNS. There may come a time when you may require to sinkhole or block a large number of domains. One of the easiest way of doing this is within your BIND DNS infrastructure by making your DNS Resolvers authoritative for the domains that you wish to block. However if you do not have a BIND DNS server then this guide will allow you to sinkhole domains within a windows server 2008 environment.