The device is lighter than we expected, and we were pleased not to notice any moving fans active during usage. Luckily the device doesn’t require line of site, so if you have an area you can tuck it away to, it can still function without issue. The Flow itself is 16 inches wide, 5 inches deep and 1 inch tall–not your standard dimensions for any other AV component. When we received the box, we knew the shape of the Vulkano Flow would be a bit unique, and we were not disappointed. 100V – 240V 50/60 Hz worldwide AC input (will need mechanical adapter socket for countries other than USA & Canada) External IR blaster cable plug in for setup where internal blaster doesn’t work.Internal IR blaster capability without need to connect IR blaster cable, which works in most setups.
Select the port to use to access status information about NAT. Select the number of minutes to keep the UDP mapping for the NAT.
#PORT FORWARD FOR VULKANO PLAYER MAC#
Select this setting if you change the organizationally unique identifier (OUI) portion of the MAC address for the virtual machine and subsequently cannot use NAT with the virtual machine.
To change settings for an existing port, select its name and click Properties.Īllow only passive mode FTP over the NAT device.Īllow any Organizationally Unique Identifier (Optional) You can use this text box to identify the forwarded service, for example, HTTP.
#PORT FORWARD FOR VULKANO PLAYER SOFTWARE#
It may be the standard port, such as 80 for HTTP, or a nonstandard port if software running in the virtual machine is configured to accept requests on a nonstandard port. The port number to use for requests on the specified virtual machine. The IP address of the virtual machine to which you want to forward the incoming requests. For example, incoming HTTP requests are usually on port 80. The number of the incoming TCP or UDP port.