Cisco VPN seems to be completely incompatible with Leopard file sharing. When a VPN connection is active, it's not possible to connect to AFP shares or do VNC screen-sharing on other Macs on the

To see details of the VPN connection, click the Cisco AnyConnect icon. To disconnect from the VPN, click the Cisco AnyConnect icon and select Disconnect in the Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client Window. Subsequent times that you use the VPN. Open your Mac’s Applications folder and double-click the Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client icon. Also unchecked the "Send all traffic to VPN connection" option. This is the only way I could connect to my work VPN and still get some http traffic (through VPN undesirably) but not my mail or chat clients. I don't know if it has to do with the way Leopard has VPN in Network System Preferences now instead of Internet Connect in Tiger. Cisco is First Major VPN Vendor to Support Win7/OSX 10.6 Clients Cisco just released support for the Windows 7 operating system in both its IPSEC client and SSLVPN client software. We are running Snow Leopard Server and have setup VPN here and external users can pretty easily connect to it. We want to make it even easier though. The one option that I've spent several hours trying to get to work is "VPN on demand", which you of course can find in the 'Advanced' pane of the VPN network options.

To see details of the VPN connection, click the Cisco AnyConnect icon. To disconnect from the VPN, click the Cisco AnyConnect icon and select Disconnect in the Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client Window. Subsequent times that you use the VPN. Open your Mac’s Applications folder and double-click the Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client icon.

Re: Snow Leopard VPN The second bears well NAT-T, but Cisco does not provide 64bit (and anyway, EzVPN is doomed to disappear, Cisco does not seem ready to support Snow Leopard to this solution), while the first from my tests and the numerous interventions on Apple forums seems not to support ESP encapsulated in UDP.

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To see details of the VPN connection, click the Cisco AnyConnect icon. To disconnect from the VPN, click the Cisco AnyConnect icon and select Disconnect in the Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client Window. Subsequent times that you use the VPN. Open your Mac’s Applications folder and double-click the Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client icon. Also unchecked the "Send all traffic to VPN connection" option. This is the only way I could connect to my work VPN and still get some http traffic (through VPN undesirably) but not my mail or chat clients. I don't know if it has to do with the way Leopard has VPN in Network System Preferences now instead of Internet Connect in Tiger. Cisco is First Major VPN Vendor to Support Win7/OSX 10.6 Clients Cisco just released support for the Windows 7 operating system in both its IPSEC client and SSLVPN client software. We are running Snow Leopard Server and have setup VPN here and external users can pretty easily connect to it. We want to make it even easier though. The one option that I've spent several hours trying to get to work is "VPN on demand", which you of course can find in the 'Advanced' pane of the VPN network options. Mozilla takes first step in pulling Firefox plug on macOS Mavericks, Yosemite and El Capitan Beginning next week, Mozilla plans to automatically move users running older versions of macOS to the 323k members in the LeopardsAteMyFace community. 'I never thought leopards would eat MY face,' sobs woman who voted for the Leopards Eating People's …