Download the latest driver, firmware, and software for your HP OfficeJet 4650 All-in-One Printer.This is HP's official website to download drivers free of cost for your HP Computing and Printing products for Windows and Mac operating system. HP OfficeJet 4650 Printer Driver HP OfficeJet 4650 Driver Software Download Download for You HP OfficeJet 4650 All-in-One Printer Full Driver and Software Support for Microsoft Windows 32-bit 64-bit and Macintosh Operating System. Printer driver for hp laserjet p1102w. Hi Guys, I'm hoping someone can help out, I'm quite desperate here. I am about to head overseas for three weeks, and need to leave my Mac running, so that I can log into it remotely using a PC. My Mac, is a MacBook Pro, and the PC I will be using is an Asus EEE PC. I will need to do simple things like grab files, open PDFs and run a few applications from time to time on the Mac. I have a billion 7404VGP router that my Mac will be plugged into, using an ADSL connection. I have a dynamic IP address so I have setup a DynDNS account. I have read countless tutorials, and posted to a few different sites, but I can not get any consistency in responses or guidance on how to set this up properly. The PC/MAC you’re working on now appears in the My Computers section of the Chrome Remote Access desktop. Format usb for mac reinstall yosemite. You can change the name of the PC by clicking the Pencil icon to the right. It's killing me. I will need to do simple things like grab files, open PDFs and run a few applications from time to time on the Mac. The grabbing of files is going to complicate things a little bit, as now you want 2 things, not just one. I have a billion 7404VGP router that my Mac will be plugged into, using an ADSL connection. I have a dynamic IP address so I have setup a DynDNS account. I have read countless tutorials, and posted to a few different sites, but I can not get any consistency in responses or guidance on how to set this up properly. It's killing me. Am I correct in understanding that VNC is the best method to do this? I'm being told that I also need to open all sorts of ports on the router. Some say I need to 'SSH', others say I need to 'VPN'. I'm quite technically literate but I'm lost in all the protocols and variations people are saying I need to use. VNC is a way to control the Mac remotely. But grabbing files will require something else, which is most likely why you got some suggestions for ssh, and/or VPN. I'm going to suggest TeamViewer Screen Sharing and File Transfer utility (free for personal use). ![]() The advantage of TeamView is that you can both control the screen and you can grab files all in one package. Just make sure you fully test your setup before leaving. However, if you want to pursue VNC, I'll add comments below. So far, I have setup the following: *On the Mac:* - Enabled 'Screen Sharing' in OS X System Preferences > Screen Sharing - Specified a password for 'VNC viewers may control the screen' within Screen Sharing settings This should be a strong password. - Setup a DynDNS account, and created a custom name (ie myname.dyndns.org) So far so good *On the Billion Router* - Setup the DynDNS configuration so that when the IP address changes it tells the server - Under Virtual Server, I have added a port forwarding entry as follows: Schedule: Always On Application: DynDNS Protocol: TCP External Port: 80 to 80 Redirect Port 80 to 80 Internal IP Address: This is where I think I need guidance. I have to select the IP associated with my MAC address, so the IP is 192.168.1.4. The port numbers are wrong. Port 80 is for a web server. VNC uses port 5900. Did you have to manually enter that IP address when you setup the port forwarding? Or does the router have some way of locking into your Mac? I ask, because of your Mac's IP address is assigned via DHCP, then it is possible the router could change the address it gives to the Mac on a power failure restart, but the port forwarding might be locked into 192.168.1.4. So if the router needs to have a stable IP address for port forwarding, then you might want to configure the Mac with a fixed IP address (preferably one outside of the routers DHCP assignment range), then use that fixed IP address with port forwarding (always test any configuration change such as this). Oh yea, you are configuring your Mac to automatically reboot when power is restored (System Preferences -> Energy Saver -> Options -> Restart automatically after power failure This is as far as I have gotten. I have installed a VNC viewer on the PC, and tried to login using the IP address that shows up in my DynDNS account, but nothing is working. As mentioned, you need to forward port 5900 for VNC. What am I doing wrong? Can somebody kindly explain (or direct me to), a straight english step by step process of how I can get this going? Any guidance is appreciate it. Port forwarding port 5900 should do the trick. However, at this point you only have screen sharing. You can do stuff to your Mac, but you can not transfer files via this connection. This is where suggestions for ssh come in (or you could go back to my TeamViewer idea 🙂 ).
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