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06-07-2012 05:01 PM
Hi
I have a question regarding the mylan apn.
When making a mobile broadband connection to mylan apn, should the user then be able accesss internet / web pages (as one would if using the internet apn)? Ie. Is mylan just same as internet, but with added VPN capabilities / security?
I ask because, when using a contract sim in my laptop, if I connect to the internet apn I get access to internet as you'd expect.
If I connect using the mylan apn (and yes mylan has been enabled by vodafone) I can't access internet / webpages - it'll take 3 minutes to load google page, if it doesn't ime out that is!?!?!??
If I then connect to a vpn (a BT N3 vpn in my case, to access nhs resources) I can then access internet / webpages (through the N3 vpn network I'm guessing!?!?!).
So is the mylan apn acting as it should, or should it allow internet access without a vpn connection?
Thanks in advance for any input / info
Pete
07-07-2012 05:45 PM
Hi petesnhs,
I think I may have the answer for you in an old thread here.
The MYLAN APN removes the HTTP header from files by design. If you want to use applications such as browsers which use these, that's when you need to use the standard Internet APN.
Dave
If I've helped at all today, why not leave me a little feedback?
09-07-2012 08:57 AM
09-07-2012 11:40 AM
Hi petesnhs
Thanks for your reply. I've now moved the thread so it's visible to all users and you can see the solution here.
Thanks
Simon
09-07-2012 12:13 PM
10-07-2012 09:29 AM
10-07-2012 10:54 AM
I'm not sure what is meant by "secure" VPN in this context? Is the security of the VPN not predominantly determined by the quality of the tunnel you are establishing, rather than the underlying connectivity (given that it's not a leased line or anything like that, specific for you)?
10-07-2012 01:55 PM - edited 10-07-2012 02:02 PM
In other posts on the forumn regarding using vpns on the vodafone mobile broadband network its been explained (by vodafone techies) that the internet apn can be used to establish a vpn connection, but that it isn't guaranteed to be secure - hence the need to use the mylan apn.
I also found that using the 'standard' internet apn for a vpn connection was very unstable; the vpn connection kept severing itself after a few minutes at best.
So I've now got mylan enabled on my sim to get a stable (and secure) vpn connection, but I can't access the internet (unless I connect to my vpn).
Hence my asking about the mylan2 apn!
So does anyone from vodafone know if mylan2 exists?
Does it offer the same stable & secure vpn connection of mylan apn, along with the internet capability of internet apn?
Cheers
Pete
10-07-2012 05:35 PM
but that it isn't guaranteed to be secure
Indeed — but I'm not clear that this means in the context of a VPN. To me, part of the point of a VPN is that the underlying carriage network *can* be insecure, hence the secure tunnel being created. Nothing important is passed in the clear before the tunnel is set up (since that would defeat the point of it being secure) so I am not additional benefit stripping the http headers conveys here.
I ask this since I've had the mylan flag attached to my account for quite some years now, and have no problem connecting to my VPN (and then proxying web traffic) or to the Internet directly from the device — I use the standard WAP APN for this. This leads me to wonder whether switching APNs is the answer in your case, or whether there is some other problem in your set up causing the problems. If everyone who had the mylan flag attached to their account had problems access the web, I would have expected this to have come up before.
11-07-2012 09:23 AM - edited 11-07-2012 09:27 AM
Thanks for the reply Neil. The more I discover / hear the stranger it gets / the more confused I get.
So you can access the internet okay using the mylan apn?!?!?!??!
As I say, if I set the apn used to 'internet' all is fine - I can access the internet, but set it to 'mylan' and no internet access (or very slow - 3 minutes+ to load google page - and / or unstable - google, or other, page time out message) .
So, this, to me, points at vodafone for the performance / functionality; but.....
Anyone from vodafone care to comment / add their 2 cents worth as to how mylan should perform?
Is mylan2 the answer? Does mylan2 exist?
Is their a definitive description of the available apn's and how they work / what they're intended for?
It seems that getting this info is like pulling (hen's) teeth!
Pete
PS. I'm using 'internet, web, web' & or 'mylan, mylan, mylan' for apn, user, password as instructed by vodafone.
Neil, If you're using 'WAP' as the apn then, I guess, this gives a different performance spec than 'internet' or 'mylan'!?!??!