That is not uncommon. Network map and a number of other features are based on broadcast protocols. Most forms of vpn will not pass that type of traffic to remote machines.
You should be able to map the device via ip address.
That is not uncommon. Network map and a number of other features are based on broadcast protocols. Most forms of vpn will not pass that type of traffic to remote machines.
You should be able to map the device via ip address.
No, I can't. I can ping 192.168.x.1 (remote vpn router) but not 192.168.x.200 (ip of remote machine with shared network resources) and attempting to map fails and it says it can't find the remote machine on the network.