Historical Document
These pages have sat here since 2008 with no update. In that time the AIM servers have been closed down (2017) and iChat has been superseded by Messages. That effectively make this a sort of Historical Document of how it worked.
I will make attempts to renew and refresh Links to either the most current site or use the Way Back Machine Archive so that people can at least look at what was used. I will make Edit Notes on this and on those where I can find no link to replace the older one as I go through the document.
Modem and Routers
iChat In Pictures >> You are in Folder
8 Modem:Router and it's Sub Folder
Linksys Router >> Page: Linksys UPnP
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5[5] |
5 Router UPnP |
02-10-2006 |
Linksys UPnP Settings
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Essentially this pic is just to show you that UPnP can be anywhere in the menus that the manufaturers have set up on your device. On this device it is on the same page where you can change the Password for the device. When you compare this with the Thomson Alcatel's position of it's UPnP setting you will see it can be anywhere.
UPnP stands for Universal Plug and Play. It allows the Application to control the ports that are open in the modem or router. It also allows multiple computers to use the same ports at the same time. As DCHP can mean your computer gets new IP from the routing device, using UPnP means you do not have to turn off DHCP.
There are concerns with UPnP in that the routing device advertises that it is doing this. It tells other devices around it to a certain amount of "Hops" away from it. A Modem doing UPnP to Computer would be one hop. A modem doing UPnP through a router to a computer would be two hops. The Modem to the ISP's server is one hop. Some people feel that as the default is often 4 hops that the UPNP device can be "seen" over the Internet as it is one hop to the ISP and another to another end user using that same server. See this at WiKi It is worth reading the whole thing though.
A Final Word
With all of these different settings described in the last few pictures it is worth remembering that that there are faults or shortcomings and Risks with each one. In the end it is a question of balancing your Needs with the applications you use, on the computers you have, against the Risks that one method over another poses.
Next:- Thompson-Alcatel Modem Pictures
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© 2005 Ralph Johns: Edited 24/9/2005, 5/5/2006
Updated September 2006
Updated October 2008. Reviewed and Updated to HTML 5 October 2024
Information Block
This site is about iChat from Version 1 through to iChat 5.x.x
Mostly this is kept as an Historical Document. Some small tense changes have been made but the content is by and large untouched.
It has a mixture of basic info and problem solving help.
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Compatibility
Much of this page has been altered to be as HTML 5 compatible as possible. This may cause issues with any of the Browser below.
I have tested in Safari 18.1, Firefox 130.x and 131.0, Vivaldi 6.9.3447.48 and iCab 6.2.3 (All Mac Browsers) I don't have access to a PC let alone multiple browsers to test on.
Previously confirmed to work with Win/IE 5.5 and later (should work in 5.0, but not confirmed),
Firefox 2, Safari 3, Opera 9, iCab 3.02 and later, Mac/IE 5, Netscape 6 and later
Old browsers (IE version 4 or earlier, Netscape 4 or earlier) may only see
a text-based page which, while not the prettiest option, is still entirely
usable.
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