John R Pierce wrote:
Lanny Marcus wrote:
On Wed, Dec 24, 2008 at 12:43 PM, Bill Campbell centos@celestial.com wrote:
<snip>
Hi Warren, Nice explanation. I would like to ask what you recommend people do if they want to be able to ssh in from anywhere on the internet. Say they are going to be traveling and they know they will have to login from machines they have no control over, like an internet cafe or a Hotel's business services suite?
<snip> I again offer you my "solution", which is to take with me "Live CDs" for CentOS 5.2 and Knoppix. I reboot the box in an Internet cafe, from a Live CD, do what I need/want to do, and when I am done, I remove the Live CD and reboot the public box again. I have not installed anything on their box and I am much safer, surfing, etc., on a public box.
i'm quite surprised many such internet cafes would let you run your own software on their hardware. many of the 'cafe' systems I've seen are booted off the network, or don't have CD drives, or could even be running Linux already, such as these http://www.dnalounge.com/backstage/src/kiosk/
Typically the case. The systems are 'locked' down boot wise, you might be able to do something they cannot charge for.
Bring your own computer. For $300 you can have an ASUS computer for these basic tasks. If they have not implemented NAC, you can unplug the cafe system if need be (done that enough times).