Exactly, thank you.crimsonwarlock wrote:Jens, you clearly have no idea what you are talking about. The firewalls you talk about are designed to protect a consumer PC that is connected to the internet. The reason that the firewall is running on YOUR PC has little to do with 'asking what traffic to allow' and everything with the fact that it is just ONE computer. There is simply no other computer around (with most consumers that is) that can run a dedicated firewall. I have a dedicated computer running a (linux) firewall to protect my complete home network. It is one firewall that protect ALL machines in my network (being my DAW, my own laptop and the laptop of my wife). This is the normal setup for any company network as well. Do you really think that a network administrator is going to maintain all these personal firewalls (like zonealarm and the likes) on all the machines in the company. Surely not. He's maintaining one serious firewall running on one dedicated machine that connects the complete internal network to the internet.jens wrote:how should that work? A firewall needs to ask you about what traffic you allow and what traffic you don't allow... - I'm sure you got something wrong there mate...arke wrote:
...or a hardware firewall which is built into every router and many DSL modems and is much more reliable than any software firewall
Or, if you have a small home network with a dedicated linux box, a router will do.
(Although I would prefer a dedicated linux or BSD computer, doubles as a file server, print server, all those fun things

