Logmein/Teamviewer - remote box offline until Windows login

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I've used Logmein for ages, but about a year ago I stopped being able to connect to a remote machine before Windows logon. So if I reboot the box, it doesn't come online until some logs in. This worked perfectly for quite some time beforehand.

Yesterday I switched to Teamviewer, but the problem is still the same.

Please can anyone help with this?
 
I've used Logmein for ages, but about a year ago I stopped being able to connect to a remote machine before Windows logon. So if I reboot the box, it doesn't come online until some logs in. This worked perfectly for quite some time beforehand.

Yesterday I switched to Teamviewer, but the problem is still the same.

Please can anyone help with this?

They changed firewall software? I know some software wont allow connections until the firewall has been started up.
 
Another check..

Do you use a wireless connection on that machine? Some wireless drivers don't initiate properly until you're logged in. (Possible even LAN drivers too).

Worth updating all drivers and not having the firewall on there
 
Ok, I uninstalled Comodo and was able to see the machine online after a reboot.

So it's definitely the firewall, but not a straight forward not letting the application through because once logged in everything works fine (correct me if I'm wrong, just a guess).

Can anyone advise the possible area in Comodo that I should be looking?

Thanks.
 
I don't bother with a standalone firewall, I just use a router and leave the Windows firewall one. Don't see the point of it
 
Ok thanks.

I'm using Avast which I reckon is pretty good, but might check out MSE as a replacement.

Back to the firewall thing, this is going to make me sound terribly thick, but all I have is the standard Netgear router that I got with my Virgin connection (no idea what model - less than four years old). What are the chances that this has a firewall built in? To be honest I've always used a standalone firewall so it's never even crossed my mind.

Thanks for the help.
 
Routers have this thing called NAT, any wild viruses/hackers will just think your router is a pc and essentially do nothing when they reach it (because it can't be infected)

If you forward a port to your PC from the router, this is when you're more likely to open yourself up to potential problems. Something like Windows firewall will take care of that side of things.


Avast is a good choice, personally, I use MSE, Nod32 if someone wants to pay for a product or nothing.. IE my Media Centre
 
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