Has anybody attended or hosted a wedding in korea that was not a wedding hall. We've decided we don't want a wedding hall and actually want something really small and...
Jayleen Y. replied:
Here's the Namsan place I mentioned: http://www.namsanartweddinghall.com/html/menu02.html
Elizabeth M. replied:
A friend just got married at Min's Club in the insadong area - it was a lovely day and the food was amazing - its a traditional building but the food is western and in several courses so it is more like a western wedding breakfast - really special day, it was the nicest, most romantic and most personal wedding I have seen in Korea - I would consider marrying there myself except the boyf is from a different province. http://www.minsclub.co.kr/min/index.html
Looking for a VPN or software solution when using my MBP in coffee shops or other public locations. Suggestions? While I have my osx firewall on, I want to include a VPN...
Anonymous replied:
Just make sure you are using encrypted websites. That will protect the contents of any pages you view. That is your best option.
TMWNN replied:
It's not clear that you understand what a VPN is.
A VPN creates a connection over the public Internet between two computers. Once established, you can do two things that would usually be difficult to do without one:
* "**Virtual**": Gain access to the other computer's files as if the two computers were on the same physical local network. With a VPN, a businessman can connect his notebook computer from a hotel room to his company and use files on the corporate network as if he were physically in his office.
* "**Private**": Encrypt all communications between the two computers. This is what you want to do. Using the businessman example, he can visit websites (whether internal corporate Intranet sites or public Internet sites) as if, again, his notebook were physically connected to his company's network. Everything from and to his own computer goes through the other end of the VPN first.
Either way, in your case, besides your notebook/iOS device, you need one computer at home to act as the other end of the VPN. Two popular choices are:
* **IPsec**. If you have a Mac at home, you can run OS X Server (Lion Server is only $50 for Lion users) on it to act as the other end of the VPN. IPsec has the advantage of being built into OS X/iOS. I've not used it, but I assume that it is as easy to use as anything else Apple makes.
* **OpenVPN**. Free software that runs on any operating system. Won't work with iOS and is much more complicated to set up, but feasible for any hobbyist not afraid of the command line. Tunnelblick is an excellent free client for OS X. This is what I use; in my case, the other end of the VPN is my router (running the Tomato USB firmware), actually.
I know many of you are very familiar with places in seoul ( Han am/Itaewon areas) which have the best views and interior design. I'm looking for a coffee shop that would...