"Mark Rogers" mark@quarella.co.uk wrote:
It is very easy to use, in that I can download a client and get it talking to my own VPN without any significant configuration (and, significantly, without having to make any changes to - say - the office I'm trying to connect to. All I need to know is the network name and its password.
So the remote office is already running some VPN server?
So far it's not that different from other VPN offerings, other than ease of use, but its peer-to-peer nature is what makes it interesting to me;
I think that's the way VPNs should work, but routing can get fun: which remote networks are best reached over each VPN. One situation is where one of the remote offices has a subscription to a particular resource: as well as traffic for the remote office network, you want to route traffic for the subscription service through that VPN.