Monday 24 September 2018

What is a Dynamic IP Address?

First, let’s explain what an IP address is. An Internet Protocal Address or IP address for short, is like your computer’s phone number. Without it, your computer wouldn’t be able to connect to the Internet. Every computer, tablet, smart phone, and Internet enabled device has it’s own IP address (even some light bulbs have an IP address these days).  An IP address consists of numbers and periods (192.168.1.1).
So, what is a dynamic IP address? Well, a dynamic IP address is one that changes from time to time and isn’t always the same. If you have a residential cable or DSL service, you most likely have a dynamic IP address. Internet Service Providers (ISPs) provide customers with a dynamic IP addresses because they are more cost effective. Instead of one IP address always being yours (a static IP address), your IP address is pulled from a pool of addresses and then assigned to you. After a few days, weeks or sometimes even months, that number gets put back into the pool and you are assigned a new number.
This is why a dynamic IP address can make it tricky to remotely access your PC, DVR or webcam, because even if you know your IP address at this moment, 5 minutes from now it could be different. So if you are away and want to access your computer remotely, but you have the wrong IP address, you will not be able to connect to your computer.
Dynamic DNS makes a dynamic IP address act as though it’s static (does not change) even though it is not.  With No-IP you create an easy to remember hostname. This hostname is the URL that you type into your browser to connect to your remote device. Our Dynamic Update Client takes your hostname that you created (yourname.no-ip.org) and points it to your IP address. When your IP address changes, our Dynamic Update Client updates your IP address on our servers, therefore your hostname stays active with your active IP address and your connection stays available all the time

Refered From
http://setuprouter.com/networking/what-is-an-ipaddress/

Friday 2 March 2018

What Is a VPN?

In the simplest terms, a VPN is used to create a secure, encrypted connection which can be 
thought  of as a tunnel between your computer and a server operated by the VPN service.

While you're connected to a VPN, all your network traffic passes through this protected tunnel,
and no one not even your ISP can see your traffic until it exits the tunnel from the VPN server 
and enters the public internet. If you make sure to only connect to websites secured with
 HTTPS, your data will continue to be encrypted even after it leaves the VPN.