Split Tunneling - the old school way vs now and why it's a pain

Split Tunneling - the old school way vs now and why it's a pain

Bounty

New member
ugh i need to vent. remember when vpns were just for hiding your ip or getting around geo blocks? now theres all this extra stuff like split tunneling and it just complicates everything. back then you clicked connect and boom done. now youre playing switchboard operator figuring out when to toggle it on and off. like who even thought splitting traffic was a good idea? sometimes i just want everything thru the vpn and forget it. but then other times i only need my torrent client or browser protected and leave the rest on my local network. so i try setting it up and half the time it fails or i forget to enable it at the right moment. dont get me started on protocols and settings either feels like dial-up era configs all over again. miss when vpns were simple one click and youre covered. now its like chess with all these moves. anyone else just want a straightforward reliable vpn w/o the headache or is split tunneling sticking around for good lmao
 
I swear I get what u mean, I once spent like an hour trying to figure out why my torrent wouldn't connect but everything else was fine. Turns out I had split tunneling enabled for just the browser but not the torrent client, and I was sitting there thinking it was some kinda VPN bug. Feels like the old dial-up days where I'd tweak configs and hope I didn't break anything just to get a stable connection.
 
just my 2 cents: if you want less headache with split tunneling, set up profiles or rules in your VPN app if it supports them, so you can switch between a full VPN or selective tunneling with a click. less fumbling around lol
 
ngl just my 2 cents, imo split tunneling is kinda a pain but kinda necessary sometimes. like who even thought splitting traffic was a good idea lol, feels like it was made by someone who likes messing with us. might as well just go back to one click vpn and forget the chaos.
 
split tunneling ain't as painful as people say, imo. used it for years and had a 20% increase in connection stability and a 15% boost in speed on average. maybe different experience but for me it's still a useful tool if set up right.
 
If you wanna avoid the pain, try ZeroTier, bruh. It's like a virtual network, easy to set up, and handles split tunneling pretty smooth. Ever used it?
 
Back in the day, I used to mess around with manual route rules for split tunneling and it was a pain to keep track of what went where. one thing that helped me was setting up specific apps to go through VPN and leaving others direct, so I
 
spot on. zero tier's lowkey a lifesaver for split tunneling. simple to config and runs pretty stable. makes old school routes look like a nightmare lol
 
I remember messing with those old route rules, man. One time I forgot to set a route and my whole VPN connection crashed, lol. Now I just use WireGuard, it's way faster and I can set split tunneling on the fly, rn it's a breeze
 
nah I think most ppl sleep on Tailscale for split tunneling. super simple to set up, kinda like zero tier but way more flexible. makes old route rules look like a nightmare smh.
 
56% of people still struggle with split tunneling. honestly tho, all these new tools are just shiny objects if you don't really understand the basics. old school routing was a pain but at least u knew what was happening under the hood. now everyone just clicks buttons and hopes for the best. feels like we lost some control in the name of convenience.
 
ok so yep, old route rules were a pain for sure but honestly, some folks still prefer them if they like total control. The new tools are easier but sometimes too abstract if you wanna fine-tune things. ymmv.
 
ngl last month i was messing around with some old school routing on a new client and found out that setting static routes in Windows was still way faster than fussing with some of the newer GUI tools that can get clunky with complex rules. If you got a solid grasp of ipconfig and route add commands, you can avoid a lot of headaches and get a more reliable setup ymmv.
 
ngl, sometimes that's all ya can do if you don't wanna mess with configs but imho, that "click and hope" approach can bite ya in the ass when stuff doesn't route right. gotta remember, manual setup still gives ya more control when things get tricky.
 
Thanks for the feedback guys. Yeah, I agree, some setups like ZeroTier can make things way easier, especially for folks who aren't into messing with routes all day. I've played around with those too and they save a lot of headache. Still think the old school way can be a pain for newbies though lol.
 
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