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Setting up a MFP for SMB scanning , problem is Norton 360 is blocking the connection (Kyocera error 1101) . Disabling Norton on the target P.C. ( not a server) allows the scans through...So my question is..Does anybody know exactly how to modify Norton to allow SMB scans through. I posted this question on Kyocera because I don't know if it's copier specific.
Have you contacted Norton? or have you talked with the IT staff for the customer? Personally UNLESS given permission to do so, I wouldn't mess with the Norton issue and throw it to their IT staff. With the way MFP's are allowing hacking of a customers network, I wouldn't put myself into the possibility of being blamed for that mess.
Have you contacted Norton? or have you talked with the IT staff for the customer? Personally UNLESS given permission to do so, I wouldn't mess with the Norton issue and throw it to their IT staff. With the way MFP's are allowing hacking of a customers network, I wouldn't put myself into the possibility of being blamed for that mess.
It's a small shop and their "I.T." dept is Bob who no longer works their. About the permissions agree ,I wouldn't unless they gave me explicit permission. However, I don't want too look stupid ( no comments) and tell them I don't know how to configure Norton. As for Norton...They are useless.
Windows Defender may not be the best AV out there, but compared to Norton, or any Symantec product, it's a significant improvement. Almost every customer PC I've had to rebuild for rootkits has had some kind of Symantec product installed, and the rest were all running McAfee. I immediately advise my customers not to renew any contracts they have for either of those products. There are far superior options available, such as ESET, BitDefender, the business grade Avast versions, and Sophos. Many third party AV products have been found to have problems that expose computers to bigger issues overall. There are more issues caused now by from leveraging vulnerabilities in either software or an operating system than you'll see from the traditional virus.
A favorite resort of the foreign residents of Yokohama during the summer months is the island of Enoshima. It is about twenty miles away, and is a noted place of pilgrimage for the Japanese, on account of certain shrines that are reputed to have a sacred character. Doctor Bronson arranged that his party should pay a visit to this island, as it was an interesting spot, and they could have a glimpse of Japanese life in the rural districts, and among the fishermen of the coast. "But as we are in for it," he continued, "we must make the best of the situation, and hope to go through in safety. Many a strong ship lies at the bottom of the sea, where she was sent by just such a storm as we are about to pass through, and many another has barely escaped. I was once on a ship in the China seas, when the captain told the passengers that it would be a miracle if we remained half an hour longer afloat. But hardly had he done speaking when the wind fell, the storm abated, and we were safe. The typhoon is to these waters what the hurricane is to the West Indies; it is liable to blow at any time between April and September, and is often fearfully destructive. OPIUM-PIPE. OPIUM-PIPE. "Surely your ladyship knows Dr. Bruce!" Hetty said with a vivid splash of colour on either cheek "A little time ago I understood that Dr. Bruce----" "I require that everywhere a strict investigation shall take place into the conduct of the soldiers with regard to the life and property of the civilian population. "Where were they buried?" They all pressed forward. "Count out. That's the only fair way," shouted the boys in the center. "Now, there's three loaves o' bread for the Sargint," said Harry, laying them down on a newspaper. "There's three for the Corpril; there's three for me; there's three for you." "'T?un't peas, thick 'un," Vennal would break in uproariously, "it's turnips—each of 'em got a root like my fist." At this moment of perplexity, some medicine, that she had obtained from Edith, occurred to her, and, with a feeling of confidence, and almost of extacy, she took a phial from a shelf in a cupboard where she had placed it, and, pouring out the contents in a large spoon, hesitated an instant ere she administered it. "Let me see," said she; "surely it was a large spoonful Edith told me to give—yet all that was in the phial doesn't fill the spoon. Surely I can't be wrong: no—I remember she said a large spoonful, and we didn't talk of any thing else—so I must be right." But Mary still hesitated, till, hearing a sudden noise in the court-yard, which, she conjectured, was her mistress returned, and as the child was getting worse every moment, she leaned back its head, and, forcing open its mouth, compelled the patient, though with difficulty, to swallow its death. The draught was taken; the rigid muscles relaxed, and for a minute the child lay motionless in her lap; but in an instant after, Mary could scarcely suppress a shriek at the horrid sight that met her gaze. The eyes opened, and glared, and seemed as if starting from the head—the fair face and the red lips, were blue, deepening and deepening, till settling in blackness—the limbs contracted—the mouth opened, and displayed a tongue discoloured and swollen—then came a writhing and heaving of the body, and a low, agonized moan: and, as Mary looked almost frantic at this dreadful sight, Edith's words, when she had given her the phial, "that there was enough there to kill," suddenly occurred to her—and then, too, came, with a dreadful distinctness, the remembrance of the true directions which Edith had given. It was nearly noon the next day, when the under-sheriff entered the room to ask if their opinions were yet unanimous. The galleyman still refused. "That for ye, coward," said Tyler, striking him with the flat side of his bared weapon. Oakley aimed another thrust which was again turned aside, and the smith, now flinging down his sword, seized upon his right hand and wrenched the dagger from its grasp. After a short struggle, Oakley fell heavily on the pavement with the blood streaming from his mouth and nostrils. HoME萝拉泷泽第4部资源
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