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From: Geoff Schaller on 18 Feb 2010 16:50 The good thing about a web service is that you can have it from any PC, right down to XP. As long as you can run a web service to host it (IIS or Firefox or whatever), you are in business. Behind a decent firewall like ISA Server or TMG Forefront, the web service can sit on any server in the network. And you can have several. Anonymous ones and secured ones. Tests and production. Cutting them over is nothing more than file copy, as is updating a web service. Geoff "Nick Friend" <nicktekhne(a)googlemail.com> wrote in message news:aaa6e7e2-80a5-4dc6-87da-ac842ae2139e(a)y17g2000yqd.googlegroups.com: > Dyndns is my backup option if all else fails, but what I'm trying to > do is have something completely internal to our program. Also we may > end up with some of our larger clients (who can easily have 30 or 40 > sites running at once) using this, in which case organising all the > accounts for something like dyndns will be a real pain. > > I think Geoff's suggestion of a web service is probably the way to go > (even if he was a bit wide of the mark in other respects ;-) ) > > Nick > > On 18 Feb, 10:28, "Joachim Duerr (ADS)" <jojo.du...(a)gmx.de> wrote: > > > > > it might be easier to use a service like dyndns.org. > > > > -- > > Joachim Duerr > > Advantage Presales > > check out my new ADS book onhttp://www.jd-engineering.de/adsbuch |