
Some of them are reporting that the password on the laptop differs from the domain password. I have staff that also have laptops that they log in remotely from. I have a domain that i set up all users on.
Password Issue Best Practices & General IT. Snap! - 3D Printed Rocket Launch, MAR10 Day, Proprietary Ink, Employment Games Spiceworks Originalsįlashback: March 10, 2000: Dot-Com Bubble Peaks (Read more HERE.)īonus Flashback: March 10, 2006: Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Reaches Red Planet (Read more HERE.). The problem is that, I need to find a way to deploy this without having to restart the computer. As long as the user restarts their computers. bat file which installs a program at startup. run batchfile at logon from locked session Windows. No matter, I'm happy to see that your problem is solved. The DNSCrypt forum or the CloudDNS forums would have been the right place. Yes, as I said, this was CloudDNS, not OpenDNS, so it wasn't good for the OpenDNS forum either. " Also turns out that Sydney's key has expired." OpenDNS resolvers do support DNSCrypt, but they have nothing to do with the client program. Yes, it is, for the OpenDNS server side, not for the client side or other DNS services. " I thought this was the dnscrypt forum." In the given case, yes, but no, it can send queries to everywhere, even to DNSCrypt. " it's just directly sends an unauthenticated query to Open DNS"
You simply wouldn't have got a response on your queries. 127.0.0.1īut this command would not have revealed if ports 4 would be blocked by your ISP.
So it is simply handy to be used for many purposes. And fact is that nslookup is installed on almost all operating systems unlike dig and host and the likes. I know the arguments against nslookup, but these do not count in many cases. " the nslookup command above is not recommended to diagnose DNS issues"īut it has proved that udp/443 and udp/5353 are not blocked by your ISP, and this was the intended purpose, not something with DNSCrypt.Īh yes, - this is jedisct1's personal opinion.