Hello, checking in to see if any one has experience with the Questar Browser. Our District is using it as for a testing browser. It gives us issues when there are certain things running in the background. So far it doesn't like Microsoft Teams, Microsoft Edge, and The Windows Notifications. We have a work around in place for Edge. But are a little stumped with what to do for teams or regular notifications. The browser wont launch if these are open, OR if they pop up while the test is going on. Just curious to see if anyone has had any luck getting this to run smoothly.

Why am I not able to hear the Text-to-Speech in the Practice or Training Test?In order to use the Text-to-Speech (TTS) feature in the practice or training test, you will need to launch the test in the Secure Browser or in a supported browser.


Questar Secure Browser Download


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Yes. SDDOE requires that all students use the secure browser for the online South Dakota Assessments testing. The correct secure browser must be installed on each student machine that will be used for administering interim and summative assessments.

In the rare event that the secure browser or test becomes unresponsive, you can force-quit the secure browser. To force the secure browser to close, use the keyboard command for your operating system as shown below. This action logs the student out of the test. When the secure browser is opened again, the student logs back in to resume testing.

#6 - Ad Blockers - I use u-Block Origin on all my computers. This eliminates ALL advertisements which pretty much is one of the key vectors of infections now a days. It works for all browsers so I would also advise getting that onto your computer.

Until you can directly connect your system up, we can't know exactly where the problem may be, and of course give you more information as to what may be going on. I don't have any issues whatsoever with connectivity, direct or wireless, so I find it perplexing. It's unfortunate (and rather odd, by now) that you haven't been cleared at the INDI forum. BTW, I use VNC viewer to connect to the Astroberry through my local router (not a switch), hardwired. I connect to it wirelessly via my web browser, once the wifi connection has been established. I assume this has been how you're connecting.

So I disconnected my monitor and such and tried to get into Astroberry via or It took a couple of tries (freshing the browser) but it finally loaded astroberry and it was connected to my local network.

If you opt for A, Astroberry is already configured to pipe VNC over https, This means you can use a web browser on your pc and only need to open port 443 on the remote router (at the scope location) and direct incoming http traffic to Astroberry.

I haven't connected to a Raspberry Pi over the internet but use Linux all the time which is the same base OS kernel. If it's in the repositories for AstroBerry you can install openVPN to establish the secure connection tunnel through the internet and then use VNC to see the desktop on the Raspberry Pi.

There are several good (and a LOT more bad) examples on the web of how to setup openVPN for a secure connection. With openVPN you can also get clients for many operating systems including Android and IOS to see what's going on at the remote site. Very handy for alternative connections and troubleshooting.

Keep in mind that openVPN will establish a secure encrypted tunnel through the internet for the home network/PC to talk to the observatory network/PC. Once that tunnel is running you can then use something like VNC or RDP to see the desktop on the rPi and interact with it. You can also set the system up to allow file transfers through the tunnel. You can set up the openVPN tunnel so that you can connect to anything on the observatory network from home to monitor or adjust the computers. You can also have a webcam monitoring the inside, temperature monitors, or any other fancy stuff you can think of. The openVPN tunnel is like having a PC sitting on the observatory network with the monitor and keyboard at home.

If the IP addresses on both ends - specifically the public-side IPs assigned to the routers - are fixed and known, you can set up the firewall rules in the routers to lock down who can "see" the network behind them. I've done this for accessing my in-laws' computers for the inevitable "remote support". Once the two ends are open to each other (and only to them), then it's what was described of having the port forwarding at the observatory point to the local IP of the Raspberry Pi, and a VNC client or browser at home connect to it using the observatory's public-side IP.

I have it set up with Astroberry with a 120Gb m.2 drive. ( actually 2 full setups ). Cheap, Straightforward to setup to boot and no more strange random memory card issues, Low power, no cooling necessary when gathering data, save images locally, use secure ftp to pull the data. 2351a5e196

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