I understand that ActiveX is a Microsoft product and was widely used with Internet Explorer and Windows. I have a Mac running El Capitan. I have a Mediasmart server at home running Windows Home Server 2011. Unfortunately, to have remote web access to the server, it requires either a Windows computer or a Mac running a virtual environment. I have tried Safari using develop/user agent and Internet Explorer and it doesn't work. I have tried FF with IE Tab extension and it doesn't work. I tried using Winebottler but I get a crash message when it is installing IE 6. Finally, I tried using Parallels 10 and it does work, somewhat, but I don't want to use Parallels each and everytime I want to login to WHS 2011.
- Military Cac Active Client For Mac
- Active Client For Mac Sierra Mac
- Active Client Install
- Active Client For Mac Sierra Pro
- Activclient
I just upgraded to macOS High Sierra and now I am not able to login using network account. However, I am able to unlock the FileVault2 volume using the old credentials but then it asks for credentials again.
How can I fix this so I can access the server directly from the Mac itself?
Military Cac Active Client For Mac
Active Client For Mac Sierra Mac
Mac mini, OS X El Capitan (10.11.6)
Active Client Install
Posted on
Active Client For Mac Sierra Pro
Perhaps this will help...
http://slacksite.com/other/ftp.html
'The main problem with active mode FTP actually falls on the client side. The FTP client doesn't make the actual connection to the data port of the server--it simply tells the server what port it is listening on and the server connects back to the specified port on the client. From the client side firewall this appears to be an outside system initiating a connection to an internal client--something that is usually blocked.'
http://slacksite.com/other/ftp.html
'The main problem with active mode FTP actually falls on the client side. The FTP client doesn't make the actual connection to the data port of the server--it simply tells the server what port it is listening on and the server connects back to the specified port on the client. From the client side firewall this appears to be an outside system initiating a connection to an internal client--something that is usually blocked.'
Activclient
Nov 19, 2006 12:44 PM