We are in the process of starting to roll out Windows 7. We are a small IT shop of 2, supporting about 150 users all across the US. Needless to say, most of our work is done remotely. When we need to log onto a users computer as ourself, we have used Remote Desktop with great sucess. When we needed to be loged on as the user, we used Netmeeting. As you know Microsoft took Netmeeting out of the OS in Vista. We had a minimial deployment of Vista, so it never really effected us. However, with Windows 7 we are actually rolling out Win 7 systems to the users. We are still working to resolve the issues with Windows 7 Offer Remote Assistance and the secure desktop prompt to allow a remote user to respond to UAC requests (making, in my opionion, the secure desktop useless as my remote users do not have admin rights, nor do I want them to know the local admin password) I've got a group policy in place to stop that from happening, but it only seems to work on computers that have the administration tools installed on for some reason. Anyway, that's not the point of this post. Last week we were experimenting with Offer Remote Assistance through our VPN connection. Before the VPN was tested, we made sure that Offer Remote Assistance worked locally (which it did). However, once the test box left our local network and connected to VPN, there was something that was blocking the Offer Remote Assistance connection. It had something to do with the firewall on the Win 7 box, because when we disabled the firewall completely on the Win 7 box, Offer Remote Assistance connected with out a glitch. I went through the firewall settings and for the life of me could not figure out what in the firewall settings would block the Offer Remote Assistance, but only when it's on the VPN. I'm hoping some one else may have run across this problem and have a solution.
Thanks in advance!
Thanks in advance!