RE: Personal VNC question

2009-09-07 Thread Philip Herlihy
I use a mix of personal and free licenses.  The Personal edition viewer is
freely downloadable and can access both types of server.  You'd need a
license for each machine on which you'll be running the Personal Edition
server.

Bear in mind that you'll need to negotiate a port-forwarding arrangement
with network admin at your work if you're going to be able to initiate a
connection to a machine within the network from outside, or the firewall
will block it.  At home you can set this up yourself.

It's more common to want to print something locally from the server to which
you're connected.  You'd probably want to transfer the printable file (or
maybe a printable version) and kick off the print job on the remote machine.

Philip Herlihy   


-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of Patrick Immel
Sent: 06 September 2009 15:37
To: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: Personal VNC question

Hello All,

First time poster here.  I am considering making the move to VNC
personal.  I am mainly needing to access my work printer(s) from my
laptop when I am at home or on the road. I would also like access to
my home computer from my laptop as well.  How would I purchase
licenses for this?  Would I buy a personal license for each machine or
could I mix personal and free licenses?

Thanks a bunch,


Patrick Immel
Lighting and Scenic Designer
Northwest Missouri State University
patrickimmel.com

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RE: Personal VNC question

2009-09-07 Thread James Weatherall
Hi Patrick,

The VNC Personal  Enterprise Edition products are licensed per-desktop, so you 
need one license for each desktop you will remotely access using them.

For more details, you can submit a purchase enquiry via http://www.realvnc.com. 
 Select Buy Now and get a quote for the number of licenses you need (in this 
case it sounds like one for work, one for home), then select the Enquire now 
link to contact our sales team, who will be happy to help.

HTH,

--
Wez @ RealVNC Ltd


 -Original Message-
 From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-
 boun...@realvnc.com] On Behalf Of Patrick Immel
 Sent: 06 September 2009 15:37
 To: vnc-list@realvnc.com
 Subject: Personal VNC question
 
 Hello All,
 
 First time poster here.  I am considering making the move to VNC
 personal.  I am mainly needing to access my work printer(s) from my
 laptop when I am at home or on the road. I would also like access to
 my home computer from my laptop as well.  How would I purchase
 licenses for this?  Would I buy a personal license for each machine or
 could I mix personal and free licenses?
 
 Thanks a bunch,
 
 
 Patrick Immel
 Lighting and Scenic Designer
 Northwest Missouri State University
 patrickimmel.com
 
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Re: Personal VNC question

2009-09-07 Thread Toninho H 1
Brian,

It seems you have quite a good arrangement, and a great view from the office 
;)

as for the printing and VPN issue, I am not sure what you do need is in fact 
a terminal session provided by VNC or RDP. Network access (including access 
to the printers) is not the solution for your needs?

If you can access the importante files on the servers disks, print to the 
required printers, or even access the outlook personal folders from the 
boat, for an instance, would it let you do your work?

VNC could be used just to systems administration and to access serverĀ“s 
programs not available on the network, like the pos software...

A VPN bridge like the one you can have with OpenVPN (http://www.openvpn.net) 
could give you the network printing and file access capabilities...



--
From: Brian M. Godfrey br...@wildbirdshop.com
Sent: Monday, September 07, 2009 12:48 PM
To: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: RE: Personal VNC question

 It's more common to want to print something locally from the server to
 which you're connected.

   This is actually very rare in our business.  We frequently print from 
 our
 client computers onto the server's printers, but rarely the reverse.  I 
 can
 also see how a salesperson or on-site technician might wish to print 
 orders,
 reports, test results, etc., on the server's printers.
   The world is an incredibly complex place and remote computing means
 pretty much everything you can think of, someone is doing or trying to do.
 We ran a Mom  Pop gift store on the north Oregon coast for 10 years, then
 decided to start wintering in a sunnier climate.  For the last six years 
 we
 have run our business part time from southern CA and the rest of the time
 from a houseboat on a river about a two hour drive from our store.  Both
 locations are connected to the store by VPNs.  My wife has a computer in 
 the
 store that is hers.  She logs into it in the morning and manages the
 employees as if she were in the store because she can see every sale that
 occurs as it occurs.  She can then suggest ways to re-arrange the
 merchandise to fill in the hole left by a tapestry or painting that is
 sold.  She can keep tabs on inventory and watch the sales, looking for a
 lull when she can ask for physical counts.  She can re-order important
 merchandise as soon as it sells.  Etc.  When she is in the store she gets
 too caught up in the fray to do this kind of oversight.  This is why we've
 done fine during the recession while other stores in our area are dying 
 off
 right and left.  And I can look out the window to my left and see the 
 river,
 the herons, the boats and so on.

 --Brian M. Godfrey
  br...@wildbirdshop.com



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RE: Personal VNC question

2009-09-07 Thread Brian M. Godfrey
   I'm not the one who was asking about printing to a printer on the server.
I was just giving an example of the variety of uses that remote computing is
making possible.  We do, in fact, have our printers mapped across the VPN
and we can print to the remote ones as if they were local on our system.
When my wife has created a new sign and wants to print it at the store she
uses the networked printers.  But sometimes that's not what is needed.  When
an employee calls or sends an email saying the Reg3 printer isn't working,
I log onto Reg3 and work on it.  I need to be able to use that printer
locally.  Still a different thing.  If my wife is at the gift show and wants
to print her orders at the store, she cannot do either of these things
because there's no VPN between her laptop in the hotel and the store's LAN.
But she has access to her computer in the store via VNC, and that would be a
case where we would want to print on the server's printer.  (Instead, she
usually prints to PDFs because we don't like to waste paper. :-)
   So we don't need it, but I think the original poster's desire to print
from his laptop onto the server's printer is quite reasonable.  Does VNC
work on iPhones?  ...

--Brian M. Godfrey
  br...@wildbirdshop.com




 -Original Message-
 From: Toninho H 1 [mailto:feitosa_neto_...@hotmail.com]
 Sent: Monday, September 07, 2009 9:35 AM
 To: br...@wildbirdshop.com; vnc-list@realvnc.com
 Subject: Re: Personal VNC question
 
 Brian,
 
 It seems you have quite a good arrangement, and a great view from the
 office
 ;)
 
 as for the printing and VPN issue, I am not sure what you do need is in
 fact
 a terminal session provided by VNC or RDP. Network access (including
 access
 to the printers) is not the solution for your needs?
 
 If you can access the importante files on the servers disks, print to
 the
 required printers, or even access the outlook personal folders from the
 boat, for an instance, would it let you do your work?
 
 VNC could be used just to systems administration and to access serverĀ“s
 programs not available on the network, like the pos software...
 
 A VPN bridge like the one you can have with OpenVPN
 (http://www.openvpn.net)
 could give you the network printing and file access capabilities...
 
 
 
 --
 From: Brian M. Godfrey br...@wildbirdshop.com
 Sent: Monday, September 07, 2009 12:48 PM
 To: vnc-list@realvnc.com
 Subject: RE: Personal VNC question
 
  It's more common to want to print something locally from the server
 to
  which you're connected.
 
This is actually very rare in our business.  We frequently print
 from
  our
  client computers onto the server's printers, but rarely the reverse.
 I
  can
  also see how a salesperson or on-site technician might wish to print
  orders,
  reports, test results, etc., on the server's printers.
The world is an incredibly complex place and remote computing means
  pretty much everything you can think of, someone is doing or trying
 to do.
  We ran a Mom  Pop gift store on the north Oregon coast for 10 years,
 then
  decided to start wintering in a sunnier climate.  For the last six
 years
  we
  have run our business part time from southern CA and the rest of the
 time
  from a houseboat on a river about a two hour drive from our store.
 Both
  locations are connected to the store by VPNs.  My wife has a computer
 in
  the
  store that is hers.  She logs into it in the morning and manages
 the
  employees as if she were in the store because she can see every sale
 that
  occurs as it occurs.  She can then suggest ways to re-arrange the
  merchandise to fill in the hole left by a tapestry or painting that
 is
  sold.  She can keep tabs on inventory and watch the sales, looking
 for a
  lull when she can ask for physical counts.  She can re-order
 important
  merchandise as soon as it sells.  Etc.  When she is in the store she
 gets
  too caught up in the fray to do this kind of oversight.  This is why
 we've
  done fine during the recession while other stores in our area are
 dying
  off
  right and left.  And I can look out the window to my left and see the
  river,
  the herons, the boats and so on.
 
  --Brian M. Godfrey
   br...@wildbirdshop.com
 
 
 
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  To remove yourself from the list visit:
  http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list
 


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