yarov3so

joined 11 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

So the thing is, my dad pays for Bell Fibe Internet and TV and when I am on LAN, I can watch all the channels that the subscription includes from virtually ANY device (firesticks, iphones, androids, laptops, etc.) either by downloading the Bell Fibe TV app from the appstore or by going to https://tv.bell.ca/home. Bell detects automatically that I am connected to the internet through them, as well as my dad's subscription (no need to log in or anything). I can trick Bell into thinking that I am at home by running a funnel on my server with the help of Tailscale. Now, when I am away from home, the app will only work when I am on wifi AND connected to Tailscale AND using my server at the exit node (funnel). If I am on cellular, I have to use the website I mentioned earlier. The best browsers for that are Samsung Internet on android and Grazing 3 on iOS, since they allow the picture to fill the entire screen. In principle, you should be able to access your subscription from any device that has a web browser and can run Tailscale.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

it's all good! Just wanted to share my experience with this tech. I am not a networking expert at all - just a tinkerer and a lifehacker who is a sucker for simple and elegant solutions. I am not above putting in some elbow grease when necessary though (like when I had to painstakingly modify coffeescript code in my Ubersicht widgets to make them just right without knowing anything about coffeescript haha)

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

I think so. I am a pretty big fan of SMB. You are not opening up your home server to the internet - you can only access Tailscale-specific IP addresses of your devices once you are connected to your tailnet (for that, they have 2FA). This is in stark contrast to solutions like ngrok where your traffic is routed through a server and no VPN encryption is required to make a connection (in Tailscale's case, a WireGuard tunnel). Also, ngrok throttles traffic quite a bit... A few people on here raised objections to the use of a third party for authentication, as is most commonly done in Tailscale, but I don't really concern myself with the pitfalls of that. I feel like getting a VPS to handle authentication yourself is overkill for me.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Those solutions might be better if you have the ability to open up your router's ports, which I do not. Trust me if I was the network admin, I would want to host my own NAS to share my movie collection with my friends, but for now, Tailscale at least allows me to access my collection myself remotely

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (3 children)

Haha if I was affiliated with them, I would not be talking about my collection of torrented material LOL

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

They are pretty darn good and versatile once you get rid of all the bloatware and ads, and remap the remote buttons. For instance, with AirReceiver installed, they become as good as an appleTV for screen mirroring (mac and iphone). Also, the ability to seamlessly sideload is paramount for me, which is why I will never own an appleTV. I remapped my app buttons to the apps I want, as well as the home button to Wolf Launcher and it's mint now. I keep Tailscale running continuously on both of my firesticks.

I used to bring my firestick along for the ride when I travel, but these days, I just run Wolf Launcher through Samsung DeX on my S10+. With the right settings, it does everything the firestick can do and more.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

The speed is pretty good - I can watch 1080p mkv video stored on my server with no issues at all when I'm in Europe (my server is in Canada). I tried watching 4K and didn't encounter any stuttering either.

 

I can't praise Tailscale and its developers enough... I discovered this do-it-yourself VPN solution about half a year ago and boy has it improved my life... Here is what I managed to accomplish with it.

I am running Tailscale on my old macbook air, henceforth referred to as my "server", my two firesticks, and my phones.

*remotely=outside of LAN, so over internet*

-I can access my SMB shares remotely from my phones with OwlFiles and from my M1 Macbook air seamlessly through Finder. All I had to do was enter a simple command on my server in Terminal to add TCP/445 to "Services". Tailscale then forwards incoming TCP connections on port 445 from within my tailnet to port 445 on my mac’s server. The result is that I am able to mount my 2TB share from anywhere I have internet and manage my files as though I was on my home network. I also have access to my entire media library from VLC installed on all my devices (once again, through SMB). If only I could somehow add my remote SMB shares to Kodi... But Kodi doesn't seem to allow me to type in custom IP addresses when trying to add SMB shares. Let me know in the comments if you know how to add remote SMB shares to Kodi (the ones it does not detect automatically).

-Similarly, by adding a suitable HTTPS port to my server's Tailscale services, I am able to manage the Transmission torrent client installed on my server remotely through Transmission's web interface (while connected to Tailscale, of course).

-I can back up to Time Machine remotely and accessing my Time Machine backups remotely as well. There are a few caveats though. On my server, I had to add a shared folder (from Settings), allow access to it via SMB and mark it as a Time Machine backup destination. The process is pretty straightforward. The trick is to add it as a backup destination THROUGH TAILSCALE by typing in the Tailscale IP of your server or the Magic-DNS domain name. Also, you will not be able to access pre-existing time machine backups through Tailscale! Only the destinations that you initially add through Tailscale. This is why I have two backup destinations on my server - one that I back up to from my LAN and one that I use over Tailscale remotely. Works like a charm!!!

-I can control my server through VNC remotely and seamlessly as if I was connected to LAN. To do that, I had to add TCP/5900 to my server's Tailscale services (which is akin to opening up TCP port 5900 to incoming connections from within the tailnet). This is particularly useful when I don't have my M1 mac with me, but need to run Python code inside Spyder. I just turn on my bluetooth/trackpad combo, connect it to my S10+, jack myself into my tailnet, MultiVNC my way into my server and BAM.

-MagicDNS deserves its own praiseful review. Not only did it assign a permanent, simple domain name to all my Tailscale-enabled devices, but it allowed me to configure my own DNS server for Tailscale-connected devices. I was then able to choose custom DNS servers for specific domains, which let me block FireTV updates without compromising my security (The DNS server used for that looks a little sketchy so I don’t want all of my traffic to go through it) and also use AdGuard DNS without breaking Doordash’s Dasher app by routing doordash-specific DNS requests to Google’s DNS and not AdGuard’s. Solid win here, as Adguard's DNS bricks the Dasher app. Let me know in the comments if you want to see my Magic-DNS configuration.

-FUNNEL: By running a funnel (proxy) on my home server, I am able to access my dad's Bell Fibe TV channels through their web interface from anywhere on Earth - Bell treats my traffic as if it's coming from my home network! It will NOT work if you use the mobile app, but works flawlessly from within Samsung Internet, Safari (on mac) and Grazing 3 (on iOS). Also, it’s quite neat to browse with my Canadian IP even when I am travelling (no more annoying "cookie consent" notices when in the EU). I suspect Netflix users could use this sort of setup to get around password-sharing restrictions. I am also running funnels on my firesticks just in case I need more bandwidth.

-SUBNETS: I am running a subnet on my home server so that I could adb into my firesticks and manage them remotely with scrcpy (update apps, install tweaks, etc). Yes, I am not a huge fan of the command line ^^' . I can also access my wifi cameras remotely from my mac. The desktop app for the cheap chinese ones only allows you to manage them over LAN, but Tailscale takes care of that. Works like a charm!

I am beyond pleased with everything Tailscale enables me to do. It baffles me that this technology is somehow free to use. I am extremely grateful to be a part of the Tailscale community. Thank you!!

Share your ideas and questions in the comments.