I know this isn't a "technical help" forum, but it's a "highly technical" forum, and I figure with the caliber of people possibly browsing this forum, someone may be able to help me..
Years ago my company had a Annex Three by Xylogics.. They setup a bunch of analog modems on it and then were able to configure the ports with an IP and username and password information. Basically, if someone performed a telnet to 192.168.5.10, it would go to the annex, dial-out to a remote site we would have to support and then automatically enter the username and password information to authenticate at the site.
I'm currently looking for a solution that will do the same thing but am having a hard time finding such a solution. I know one thing I could do is build a windows box with terminal server on it, throw a bunch of modems in it and then setup all the connections to save passwords. After that an employee can use the TS client to get into the machine and then just double click the connection. ALthough this would work, we're looking for something a little more practical where the least amount of user intervention is required (Less questions for me).
Can anyone suggest anything? If you need more information, please let me know..
Thanks,
pX
Years ago my company had a Annex Three by Xylogics.. They setup a bunch of analog modems on it and then were able to configure the ports with an IP and username and password information. Basically, if someone performed a telnet to 192.168.5.10, it would go to the annex, dial-out to a remote site we would have to support and then automatically enter the username and password information to authenticate at the site.
I'm currently looking for a solution that will do the same thing but am having a hard time finding such a solution. I know one thing I could do is build a windows box with terminal server on it, throw a bunch of modems in it and then setup all the connections to save passwords. After that an employee can use the TS client to get into the machine and then just double click the connection. ALthough this would work, we're looking for something a little more practical where the least amount of user intervention is required (Less questions for me).
Can anyone suggest anything? If you need more information, please let me know..
Thanks,
pX