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  • Qouch Manages Your Movie and TV Downloads from Your iPhone, Is Exactly What Every Usenet User Needs

    In Usenet, Sick Beard, Couch Potato, Movies, Tv Shows, Internet Pvr, File Sharing, Iphone, Ios, Ipod Touch, Ipad, Remote Access, Downloads, Iphone Downloads, / 25 April 2012 / 0 comments

    Qouch Manages Your Movie and TV Downloads from Your iPhone, Is Exactly What Every Usenet User NeedsiOS: If you're running Usenet programs like Sick Beard and Couch Potato to download movies and TV shows as soon as they're released, you'll love Qouch. It can not only monitor all your downloads, but keep you up to date on when new episodes are coming out, let you add new shows and movies, and more right from your phone.

    Accessing your "internet PVR" from your web browser is fine and dandy, but if you're sitting on the couch with nothing but your iPad—or if you're out and about with only your phone—Qouch is incredibly convenient to have around. All you need to do is start it up, type in the server information for SABnzbd+, Sick Beard, and/or Couch Potato, and you're off to the races. You can view and manage downloads, add new movies and TV shows to download, and even see what's coming up. The interface is very well put together and simple to use, too. If you're out of the house and want a movie ready for you when you get back, Qouch makes it a snap.

    Qouch is a $2.99 download for the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. Note that if you want to access Usenet from outside of your home, you'll need to do a bit of extra setup first. Thanks, Jason!

    Qouch | iTunes App Store

  • Build Your Own VPN to Pimp Out Your Gaming, Streaming, Remote Access, and Oh Yeah, Security

    In Security, Privacy, Vpn, Gaming, Networking, Streaming, Browsing, Hamachi, Remote Access, Remote, Travel, Safe Browsing, Encryption, Downloads, Mac Downloads, Windows Downloads, Linux Downloads, Feature, / 11 April 2012 / 0 comments

    Build Your Own VPN to Pimp Out Your Gaming, Streaming, Remote Access, and Oh Yeah, Security Even if you have no idea what a VPN is (it's a Virtual Private Network), the acronym alone conjures visions of corporate firewalls and other relatively boring things, right? While a VPN is a common corporate security tool, it's also one of the coolest things you can set up for personal use that you probably have never tried.

    Browsing the web from a coffee shop can be dangerous, but you know that already. Gaming with friends over the internet is great, but it's better when it's just you and your friends, right? Wouldn't it be nice if you could surf the web anywhere as if you were at home, and game with friends like you were all in the same room? That kind of functionality is at the very heart of a VPN, and we're going to show you how to set one up. Here's how to get started.

    Build Your Own VPN to Pimp Out Your Gaming, Streaming, Remote Access, and Oh Yeah, Security

    What's a VPN?

    A VPN, or Virtual Private Network, is just a network of computers that are all connected securely even though they're in different locations and all using different connection methods. The biggest benefit to a VPN is that all of the computers on one are securely connected to one another and their traffic encrypted and kept away from prying eyes. Another great benefit to a VPN is that all of the computers on one are effectively on the same network, meaning they can communicate as if they were right next to one another, plugged in to the same router. Photo by cloki (Shutterstock).

    If security is all you want, sure you can sign up for a free or paid VPN service that will encrypt your traffic only, but why throw your money (and trust your privacy and security) into the hands of a third party when you can roll your own? It's incredibly easy, and once you have your own personal, private VPN, you can browse securely on any network by leveraging your home internet connection, get a group of friends together for LAN gaming, get access to all of your music and movies from home with ease, and more.

    Why You Should Roll Your Own

    We've often discussed the dangers of using unsecured internet connections at coffee shops, airports, or other public places, especially if you're planning on doing any browsing or surfing that may be considered private. We've warned you of the ubiquitous "Free Public Wi-Fi", explained how you can stay safe when you do use public networks, and even outlined how to set up your own private VPN with Hamachi.

    We're going to build on that second story, where Adam Pash showed us how to set up a proxy and Hamachi to protect ourselves when browsing from public places, and extend Hamachi's functionality to not just secure surfing, but LAN gaming with friends, secure remote access to your home computers and files when you're on the road and on the go, and more. Rolling your own VPN—while ideal for security—also gives you access to your home network at any time, and all of the great things that come with effectively sitting at home using your Wi-Fi there, when you're actually at home, in a coffee shop, or across the country.

    Build Your Own VPN to Pimp Out Your Gaming, Streaming, Remote Access, and Oh Yeah, Security

    Before You Get Started

    Hamachi isn't the only utility that does this—most notably OpenVPN, which is one of your favorite VPN tools. However, for our purposes, Hamachi wins for being the most hands-off, zero-configuration VPN tool to configure. The others aren't terribly difficult, but Hamachi really is easy to install. Before we get started, there are a few prerequisites that will make this solution work best for you:

    • You have to have an always-on computer at home.
    • You don't trust, or don't want to use third party VPN services.
    • You don't have an office or school that offers free VPN services..

    If the above sounds about right, and you have a nice sturdy broadband connection at home (remember, when you're connected to it, you'll be sending your traffic to your home network and then out again, so you may feel a performance hit by double-hopping) then it's time to get started.

    Set Up and Configure Hamachi

    Hamachi runs on Windows, OS X, and Linux, so grab the installer for your OS of choice. It comes in two flavors: a free (for non-commercial use) version that gives us everything we want (the ability to leverage to our home network from anywhere over a secure, encrypted connection), and a paid, managed version that does more than you'd likely ever need.

    We don't want to rehash all of the steps that Adam walked through in his post on setting up Hamachi and Privoxy for secure browsing—so here's the quick version:

    1. Download Hamachi
    2. Run it. If it's your first time, click the Blue power button to power it on.
    3. Click the Network menu, then select Create a new network, giving your network a name and a good, strong password.
    4. Done!

    After you've set up your network on your always-on computer at home, grab your laptop, netbook, or any other system you plan to travel with, and install the client there. Instead of creating a new network, this time join the one you created (Network > Join an existing network), using the network name and password you just generated. That's all there is to it—it really is zero-configuration security. Make a note of that network name and password—you'll need it again later. Now those two computers can securely access one another from anywhere, and do so as though they're on the same local network. (You can add as many computers as you want to the network you just created.)

    Build Your Own VPN to Pimp Out Your Gaming, Streaming, Remote Access, and Oh Yeah, Security

    Protect Your Web Browsing, Anywhere You Roam

    Most people use VPNs to protect their browsing when they're using an unsecured network, like the one at your local library or coffee shop. With Hamachi, you can turn turn your always-on system at home into a proxy that you can securely browse through when you're there. We suggest (and help you set up) Privoxy to handle this, and while it takes a little work, once you're finished, you're good to go. You'll effectively be connecting to your home computer, and then asking your home computer to feed you any sites or services you want to access, so your browsing may slow down a bit based on that—but if you have broadband at home and a good connection to the internet from your always-on computer, the slowdown will be worth the added security. The knowledge that you're largely protected from snooping by people who may be using tools like Firesheep or Faceniff to sniff out your credentials on public networks is a great feeling, and knowing that your connection is secured and encrypted goes a long way towards making it more comfortable to check your email, log in to your social networks, and generally use the web through your proxy when you're out and about as though you were at home (because effectively, you are!) Photo by Ed Yourdon.

    Build Your Own VPN to Pimp Out Your Gaming, Streaming, Remote Access, and Oh Yeah, Security

    Bring Your Friends In On Private LAN Gaming

    Secure browsing isn't the only thing you can do with Hamachi though. Connecting to your home computer with Hamachi puts you on an on-demand mesh network with any other computers connected to the same network, which is ideal if you and your friends want to effectively LAN party it up without lugging your computers to each other's houses. You have the choice with Hamachi to either give out the network name and password you created earlier, or you can set up a specific network just for your friends to play LAN games together, without forcing you all to try and find slots on a public server or desperately try to find each other in whatever matchmaking service your favorite games offer. Photo by dbgg1979.

    Every computer in your virtual LAN will have to have Hamachi installed, and they'll all have to log in to the network with the credentials you supply. One system will have to host the game server (and with most games, it's best if that system is the most powerful one with the fastest connection to the internet, and ideally one you're not actually using to play the game) and all of the other systems, including yours, will connect to it as clients. As far as Hamachi is concerned, as long as it's running in the background of all of those systems, you're all set. Keep in mind that here too your connection to your friends will be as slow as the slowest system in the group, but again, if you all have broadband you should be fine.

    Build Your Own VPN to Pimp Out Your Gaming, Streaming, Remote Access, and Oh Yeah, Security

    Use Hamachi for Zero Configuration Remote Access and Streaming

    Along with secure browsing, running Hamachi at home while you're traveling gives you a great way to get access to your files at home without the need for remote desktop tools. If it's just movies, music, or photos you're looking for, a shared folder on your home computer will do the trick. If you use iTunes, you can use Home Sharing to stream anything in your library at home to the computer you have. That means you can relax in your hotel room across the country and stream the movies you have downloaded to your HTPC, or stream the music you have stored on your home PC, effortlessly, as though you were right there. Photo by myvector (Shutterstock).

    You may not care about streaming music if you're already using one of the many cloud-based music services when you're away from home, but when it comes to movies, TV shows, photos, or other media that's too much for your Dropbox account, using Hamachi when you're on the go is a great option. Speaking of bandwidth, it's worth mentioning here that when you stream movies to your PC while connected via Hamachi, you're limited to your upload speed at home, and you are using bandiwidth on your home connection—so if you have an ISP that throttles after a certain bandwidth limit (like Comcast's 250GB), you may want to exercise some caution.

    You can also get out from under services like GoToMyPC or even LogMeIn Free, made by the same people who now manage Hamachi. With Hamachi installed and active, you can remote desktop natively or use VNC to connect to any computer on your home network if you want to use it as though you were there, all without worrying about port forwarding or tweaking your router to make sure you can connect from outside of your network.

    Enjoy the Benefits

    These uses just scratch the surface of some of the things you can do with a tool like Hamachi. There are caveats, like using bandwidth on your home connection as well as where you are, and the potential slowness that comes with being limited by your upload speed at home, but the benefits of a VPN go past just accessing the files on your home network and connecting to the internet as though you were sitting right there at home. LAN gaming, collaborating on an ad-hoc network with friends or coworkers, secure browsing, they're all easy to set up once you have your own VPN up and running.

    What are some of your favorite uses for Hamachi—or your favorite VPN client—beyond simple secure tunneling? Let us know in the comments below.

  • Access Your Computer From Afar This Weekend

    In Weekendhacker, Remote Access, Remote Control, Vpn, Vnc, Security, Networking, Logmein, Logmein Hamachi, Hamachi, Remote Desktop, Dropbox, Files, Streaming Video, Streaming Music, Cloud Print, Bittorrent, Feature, / 17 February 2012 / 0 comments

    Access Your Computer From Afar This WeekendSo you're out of the house for the weekend, and you've brought your trusty laptop with you, but you need something from your home machine. Here are a ton of different ways you can get to your home computer from anywhere, whether you just need a few files or full, unfettered access.

    Access Your Computer's Screen with Remote Desktop Tools

    Access Your Computer From Afar This WeekendNo matter what you need from your home computer, you can get it by sharing your computer's screen with a remote desktop tool. We've shown you how to do this with TightVNC (and even secure it with Hamachi), though there are a ton of great tools out there, from the dead simple TeamViewer to Windows' built-in Remote Desktop tool. If you want access from your phone or tablet, you can use one of our favorite mobile VNC clients as well, like PocketCloud for Android or Screens for iOS. It isn't always the most efficient way to access your computer from afar (say, if you just need to grab one file), but it's easily the most versatile.

    Access Your Home Network with a VPN

    If you don't need direct access to your computer, but want to act as if your laptop is still connected to your home network, you can do so by creating a VPN with LogMeIn Hamachi. This will let you listen to shared iTunes libraries, access shared folders, or do anything else you could do from inside your network. If you add the free Privoxy application to the mix, you can even use that VPN to secure and encrypt all your web browsing, so no one on that sketchy coffee shop Wi-Fi can see what you're doing. LogMeIn Hamachi is our personal favorite VPN, but there are some other great ones out there, including your guys' favorite, OpenVPN. Of course, Windows has a built-in VPN tool too, for you Windows-only folks.

    Stream Media to All Your Devices From Home

    Access Your Computer From Afar This WeekendIf all you're looking for is access to your music and videos, VPNs and VNC can seem like overkill. Instead, you could just use an app like Air Video (for iPhone users), StreamToMe (for Mac and iPhone users), or Plex (for all users) to live convert and stream your videos to your computers and mobile devices. If it's music you want, Audiogalaxy and Subsonic both provide pretty neat services that let you access your tunes from the web or from your phone—no need to deal with a long, arduous upload process like you would with Google Music (though we do still love Google Music).

    Access Your Important Files On-The-Go

    If it's just regular old files you need, there are a ton of ways to do that. While you could, of course, just sync your important files to Dropbox (even if they're outside your Dropbox folder), setting up a file sharing server can give you access to all the files you want, without dealing with Dropbox's size limitations. We're currently fans of the Pogoplug software, which makes sharing your files super easy—though with a bit of work, you can roll your own awesome, drag-and-drop enabled web sharing service, too.

    Print, Torrent, and More Using Simple Remote Tools

    Access Your Computer From Afar This WeekendYou can get a remote access app designed for nearly any task these days. Apart from the basics above, you can also shut down your Windows computer from anywhere with a simple app, or print documents at home with Google Cloud Print, or, if you're anti-Google, this Dropbox trick for both Windows and Mac.

    If it's torrenting you're into, both of our favorite BitTorrent clients for Windows and OS X have remote UIs built-in. With just a bit of setup, you can monitor your torrents, add new ones, and even download the resulting files to your laptop or smartphone. You can also add new torrents with Dropbox, though you won't be able to monitor them (if that matters to you).


    These are just a few of the things you can do from afar, but they should get you almost anything you need with minimal setup. If you prefer to have your home computer go to sleep while you're away, you can even set up wake-on-LAN to turn it back on from afar. Got any other remote access tricks we didn't mention? Share them with us in the comments below.

  • How to Use Your Smartphone to Remotely Send Downloads to Your Home Computer

    In Remote Control, File Transfer, Files, Downloading, Downloads, Iphone, Ipad, Ipod Touch, Ios, Android, Smartphones, Remotes, Scheduling, How To, Remote Access, File Sharing, Lifehacker Video, Video, Clips, Feature, / 13 January 2012 / 0 comments

    How to Use Your Smartphone to Remotely Send Downloads to Your Home ComputerSometimes you come across a file you want to download but all you've got is your smartphone. Perhaps it's a standard file, perhaps it's a torrent. Whatever the case may be, it's relatively simple to get your smartphone to tell your home computer to get started on that download from afar. Here's how.

    Remotely Download Web-Hosted Files

    How to Use Your Smartphone to Remotely Send Downloads to Your Home Computer If you want to download a file to your computer that's hosted somewhere on the web, this is the method you want to use. All you need is an account with Dropbox (our favorite file-syncing tool) and a web browser on your smartphone. To download that file to your home computer from the comfort of your phone, just follow these steps (or watch the video to the left):

    1. Grab the URL of the file you want to download on your smartphone.
    2. Open any web browser on your smartphone and head over to urldroplet.com.
    3. Enter the URL in URL Droplet's only text field and click the "Log In" button.
    4. Log into your Dropbox account and grant access to URL Droplet.
    5. When you're back on the main URL Droplet page, scroll down to the bottom of the screen and see if the file is listed as queued. If not, just add it again via URL Droplet's only text field and click the "Save" button.
    6. It'll take a few minutes for the file to show up in your Dropbox, but when it does it'll be in the root folder and you can use it when you get back to any computer that's syncing your Dropbox folder.

    Pretty easy! If you want to see a walkthrough, watch the video above.

    Alternatively, if you want to do this with a native iPhone app, download Drop It ($1). For another option, your could set If This Then That to add, for example, emailed file URLs to your Dropbox (learn how to use it with our guide).

    Remotely Download Torrents

    How to Use Your Smartphone to Remotely Send Downloads to Your Home ComputerThere are a few ways to remotely download torrents, and we have a bunch of guides to help you do it. If you want to stick with the same basic method outlined above, you can send .torrent files remotely to your Dropbox folder. For a little more control, though, you might prefer just using uTorrent's mobile interface to remotely schedule torrents instead:

    1. Grab a copy of uTorrent (if you don't have one already).
    2. Open up uTorrent and edit its Preferences/Settings.
    3. Go to the "Remote" tab and check the box next to "Enable uTorrent Remote".
    4. Enter a unique computer name and a password. If your computer name is accepted and isn't in use by anyone else, you'll be asked to answer a new security question. Fill in your answer and press okay.
    5. Go to remote.utorrent.com in your smartphone's web browser and log in with your computer's name and password.
    6. Press the + button to add a new torrent via URL.

    That's all there is to it! For a more detailed walkthrough, see our recent guide to monitoring your BitTorrent downloads from any computer or mobile device.

    Remotely Download Files from Usenet

    How to Use Your Smartphone to Remotely Send Downloads to Your Home ComputerUsing your smartphone to tell your home computer to remotely download files from Usenet is really easy to do. You just need the right app, SABnzbd+ running on that home computer, and the port SABnzbd+ runs on (8080 by default) forwarded to that computer via your router's admin software. Then you can use the relevant app for your smartphone to remotely schedule downloads. That's the process in a nutshell. Here's the step by step:

    1. Presumably you've already got a Usenet account and set up SABnzbd+, but if not you need to do that.
    2. Forward port 8080 (or whatever port you're using) to the IP address of the computer running SABnzbd+. If you don't know how to do this, read our port forwarding guide.
    3. Now you need an app for your smartphone. If you're using an iPhone, download myNZB ($3). For Android, download, NZBAir ($5), sabdroidplus (Free), NZBDroid (Free, $1), or one of the many other options.
    4. Once you've downloaded your NZB-adding app of choice, go into SABnzbd+ on your computer, grab your API key. You can find it by choosing Config -> General, then scrolling down the page to find the "API Key", and copy it. You can either do this directly on your phone or do it on your computer and send the API key to your phone via email (or whatever method you prefer).
    5. Go into the settings on the app you chose and enter your SABnzbd+ credentials. This will generally include your username, password, and API key. On the iPhone, you'll find this in the myNZB settings in the Settings app—not in the myNZB app. On Android, the location will vary a little because we're not talking about a multiple apps, but you'll find the settings you're looking for by pressing the menu button on your device.

    Now you're all set up! You can now use your SAB-compatible app to search for and schedule Usenet downloads with ease.


    Got any other clever ways you start your home computer downloading files from afar? Let's hear about it in the comments.

 
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