Microsoft Office Communicating on Port 37926???

A

ANONYMOUS

The IPBus protocol uses UDP port 37926. For communication across a
firewall the UDP port would need to be open for
both outgoing and incoming traffic.

Can you tell us which Firewall you are using? Is it a software based or
harware based? I suspect, you will need to enable this port for
communication purposes.

hth
 
A

ANONYMOUS

The IPBus protocol uses UDP port 37926. For communication across a
firewall the UDP port would need to be open for
both outgoing and incoming traffic.

Can you tell us which Firewall you are using? Is it a software based or
harware based? I suspect, you will need to enable this port for
communication purposes.

hth
 
A

ANONYMOUS

The IPBus protocol uses UDP port 37926. For communication across a
firewall the UDP port would need to be open for
both outgoing and incoming traffic.

Can you tell us which Firewall you are using? Is it a software based or
harware based? I suspect, you will need to enable this port for
communication purposes.

hth
 
A

ANONYMOUS

The IPBus protocol uses UDP port 37926. For communication across a
firewall the UDP port would need to be open for
both outgoing and incoming traffic.

Can you tell us which Firewall you are using? Is it a software based or
harware based? I suspect, you will need to enable this port for
communication purposes.

hth
 
A

ANONYMOUS

The IPBus protocol uses UDP port 37926. For communication across a
firewall the UDP port would need to be open for
both outgoing and incoming traffic.

Can you tell us which Firewall you are using? Is it a software based or
harware based? I suspect, you will need to enable this port for
communication purposes.

hth
 
A

ANONYMOUS

The IPBus protocol uses UDP port 37926. For communication across a
firewall the UDP port would need to be open for
both outgoing and incoming traffic.

Can you tell us which Firewall you are using? Is it a software based or
harware based? I suspect, you will need to enable this port for
communication purposes.

hth
 
A

ANONYMOUS

The IPBus protocol uses UDP port 37926. For communication across a
firewall the UDP port would need to be open for
both outgoing and incoming traffic.

Can you tell us which Firewall you are using? Is it a software based or
harware based? I suspect, you will need to enable this port for
communication purposes.

hth
 
A

ANONYMOUS

The IPBus protocol uses UDP port 37926. For communication across a
firewall the UDP port would need to be open for
both outgoing and incoming traffic.

Can you tell us which Firewall you are using? Is it a software based or
harware based? I suspect, you will need to enable this port for
communication purposes.

hth
 
B

Bill

I'm using Outpost v3.0, but searching the net I've found that this is
firewall-independent.

Yes, IPBus uses the same port, but while IPBus is not specifically installed on my
computer, something called "Microsoft TV/Video Connection" is.

What I do not understand is why this is activated **ONLY** by Microsoft Office 2000
applications. People seem to blindly enable the port out of frustration, without
actually knowing what they are doing or why they are doing it. I don't like enabling
ports I don't understand.
 
B

Bill

I'm using Outpost v3.0, but searching the net I've found that this is
firewall-independent.

Yes, IPBus uses the same port, but while IPBus is not specifically installed on my
computer, something called "Microsoft TV/Video Connection" is.

What I do not understand is why this is activated **ONLY** by Microsoft Office 2000
applications. People seem to blindly enable the port out of frustration, without
actually knowing what they are doing or why they are doing it. I don't like enabling
ports I don't understand.
 
B

Bill

I'm using Outpost v3.0, but searching the net I've found that this is
firewall-independent.

Yes, IPBus uses the same port, but while IPBus is not specifically installed on my
computer, something called "Microsoft TV/Video Connection" is.

What I do not understand is why this is activated **ONLY** by Microsoft Office 2000
applications. People seem to blindly enable the port out of frustration, without
actually knowing what they are doing or why they are doing it. I don't like enabling
ports I don't understand.
 
B

Bill

I'm using Outpost v3.0, but searching the net I've found that this is
firewall-independent.

Yes, IPBus uses the same port, but while IPBus is not specifically installed on my
computer, something called "Microsoft TV/Video Connection" is.

What I do not understand is why this is activated **ONLY** by Microsoft Office 2000
applications. People seem to blindly enable the port out of frustration, without
actually knowing what they are doing or why they are doing it. I don't like enabling
ports I don't understand.
 
B

Bill

I'm using Outpost v3.0, but searching the net I've found that this is
firewall-independent.

Yes, IPBus uses the same port, but while IPBus is not specifically installed on my
computer, something called "Microsoft TV/Video Connection" is.

What I do not understand is why this is activated **ONLY** by Microsoft Office 2000
applications. People seem to blindly enable the port out of frustration, without
actually knowing what they are doing or why they are doing it. I don't like enabling
ports I don't understand.
 
B

Bill

I'm using Outpost v3.0, but searching the net I've found that this is
firewall-independent.

Yes, IPBus uses the same port, but while IPBus is not specifically installed on my
computer, something called "Microsoft TV/Video Connection" is.

What I do not understand is why this is activated **ONLY** by Microsoft Office 2000
applications. People seem to blindly enable the port out of frustration, without
actually knowing what they are doing or why they are doing it. I don't like enabling
ports I don't understand.
 
B

Bill

I'm using Outpost v3.0, but searching the net I've found that this is
firewall-independent.

Yes, IPBus uses the same port, but while IPBus is not specifically installed on my
computer, something called "Microsoft TV/Video Connection" is.

What I do not understand is why this is activated **ONLY** by Microsoft Office 2000
applications. People seem to blindly enable the port out of frustration, without
actually knowing what they are doing or why they are doing it. I don't like enabling
ports I don't understand.
 
B

Bill

I'm using Outpost v3.0, but searching the net I've found that this is
firewall-independent.

Yes, IPBus uses the same port, but while IPBus is not specifically installed on my
computer, something called "Microsoft TV/Video Connection" is.

What I do not understand is why this is activated **ONLY** by Microsoft Office 2000
applications. People seem to blindly enable the port out of frustration, without
actually knowing what they are doing or why they are doing it. I don't like enabling
ports I don't understand.
 
B

Bill

I'm using Outpost v3.0, but searching the net I've found that this is
firewall-independent.

Yes, IPBus uses the same port, but while IPBus is not specifically installed on my
computer, something called "Microsoft TV/Video Connection" is.

What I do not understand is why this is activated **ONLY** by Microsoft Office 2000
applications. People seem to blindly enable the port out of frustration, without
actually knowing what they are doing or why they are doing it. I don't like enabling
ports I don't understand.
 

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