You can run a Sesame server through the internet so long as the web server is running either a Win32 or Linux for Intel OS. Clients running a Sesame client can then connect to it much as they would connect to a server on your local network.
If your web server is called
www.MyExampleWebServer.com, kick off the server with:
sesame -server
www.MyExampleWebServer.comTo connect with a Sesame client:
sesame -client
www.MyExampleWebServer.comDepending on what is already running on your web server, you may have to specify the port numbers. It is likely that you may have to have root or administrative permission to start the server. Almost certainly you will want to let the admin know that you have opened a couple of ports on the server machine.
You cannot connect to the Sssame server directly with a web browser. That would require a CGI interface. If there is demand and Lantica marketing gives the thumbs up, we would like to release a Sesame CGI interface that would allow a direct web browser connection to the Sesame engine - as though the web browser was a Sesame client.
In the meantime, the Sesame Report Writer directly produces HTML web pages which can be mounted (even in real time) on a web server and directly accessed by a web browser through the internet. In other words you can generate reports in a directory that is publicly addressable as web pages.
It may well, also be possible to contrrol a Sesame server from a web page by using the the File I/O commands in SBasic. How that would be done is dependant on your particular application - but given that you can create a file from CGI/PHP - and that Sesame can read that file and produce a web page in response (via file I/O or report writer) - it is certainly a possibility.