Manual
remember that one of the problems NAT servers add is that private IP addresses delivered to codecs (and the
only addresses of which the codecs are aware) have no bearing on the public addresses seen from the Internet.
In extreme scenarios, several layers of address locality can be stacked, assuring that the IP address assigned to a
Before deployment of Switchboard, the answer to this dilemma was to assure that the codec located in the studio
input into each codec individually.
Switchboard
Server. Codec users simply log in to the free server and are given an account, username, and password. Once
familiar name by which the codec will be known within that group.
Once enabled, a codec in a group that is physically connected to the Internet will sync with the server. The current
public IP address of the codec will be obtained by the server and the user directory will be updated with the new IP
to the server.
If IP addresses should change, the codec will re-sync with the server from the new address, and all will be updated
of the user.