this post was submitted on 16 Jan 2024
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With Tailscale, very little know-how is required. Install the app on 2 devices, see it in action.
Depending on your home devices, you may need to enable Subnet Routing on a device that can run Tailscale, since the DVR/NVR may not have the capability.
A Tailscale Subnet Router will route Tailscale traffic to the LAN on which it resides, so you can access devices that can't run Tailscale. For example, I've printed to my home wifi printer while remote. I've also used it to access a computer that didn't have TS installed yet because I'd just set it up, and a digital photoframe that only supports SMB. My subnet router is a Raspberry Pi, because it's always on. But it used to be my Windows desktop, because it's always on.
Tailscale documents it all pretty well. You install your first client, in the process creating a TS account (which is used to automate the encryption key management). Then install to your second device, and ta-da, you have a TS Mesh network.
To enable Subnet Routing, you open the management console via one of your TS clients, it'll open in a browser. Pick the device, check the box for Subnet Router, select the network (it'll be a choice, only one, because it's only on one LAN), and Bob's your uncle.