All of this seems to point to a problem at your end, not so much the connection but
the software. wether that is vnc or something else doing something wrong is a bit hard
to determine... Ideas:
- virusscanner: vnc was recently used in a virus. An overly protective scanner may
interfere, e.g.
Well, my message wasn't really an answer. It's rather a viewpoint.
Ctrl+Esc and Alt+Tab are useful for people who use keyboard a lot more than
mouse. But if it's necessary to do click on Ctrl-down, press Esc and then
click on Ctrl-up, clicking directly the Start button is much simpler
On 13 Mar 2003 at 16:01, Arnt Witteveen wrote:
So after all that waffle, and in the hope that I have not
sent you not all to sleep, I have 2
questions:
1. Is there a way to circumvent the Error Box
2. If not, could the test be changed in a future version
of VNC so that the
To use SSH with VNC you will need a SSH server. Here's a good howto:
http://tech.erdelynet.com/cygwin-sshd.html and after that's installed follow
this to use with VNC: http://tech.erdelynet.com/ssh-vnc.html .
I have done the above with great success.
Rachel
- Original Message -
From:
This is a problem for me too -there are lots of times when it can
happen. For example I have a number crunching program running 24 hours a
day at home (on Win XP pro) , and I can control and restart it from work as
long as I stay logged in as the current user at home. But if my wife or
son
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David Colquhoun
At 12:00 14/03/2003 +, you wrote:
Why would the user be logging out of the session? Closing
the VNCviewer
will leave everything intact and waiting for the user when
they log
well the way i do it in the script:
copy \\main_server\vnc c:\windows\system
regedit /s \\main_server\vnc.reg
so all the vnc files in the vnc folder are copied to the system folder.
then:
i have a reg file of vnc put in the registry of the vnc settings with the
password and put in the RUN
We've just starting experimenting with the VNC integration in Hyena
(www.systemtools.com). So far it looks pretty good. It will push it out, create and
start the service, and stop the service when it's done. Most of these choices are
configurable. Pretty cool, since we have been using Hyena
: Xvnc acts as a client to the Xserver and server for the VNC client
Wrong. Xvnc is both an X server and an RFB server.
Perhaps you are confused by the fact that X applications are
the clients (even though, if over a network, they are remote;
some people equate remote with server, but it is
Hello
I have download the VNC program. Install it on my PC and of my freinds one.
But we have a problem. Not one of us can connect to the server. We have the
same platform installed on our PC WindowsXP. Does someone know waht we can
do to connect to the other computer. Thanks already.
Kind
You mean, the client screen is the same size as the server screen.
So the task bar of the server isn't visible, right ? If that's the case, I
understand why :-)
-Original Message-
From: Bruno SABLON [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: vendredi 14 mars 2003 17:07
To: [EMAIL
If you have your machine firewalled, you'll need to open port 5900 (5800
also you want to access from a browser).
Robert
- Original Message -
From: scilla [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 14, 2003 1:18 PM
Subject: Problem
Hello
I have download the VNC
It does get confusing, but I think of it this way:
An XServer allows clients to send draw commmands, which it
executes by drawing on a Screen. Xvnc draws on a virtual
screen.
It quilifies as an XServer. What confusing with X-Windows is
that the server runs where the screen is which is usually
First check out this:
http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/sshvnc.html
Although it has a *nix focus, it explains succinctly the theory behind
tunneling VNC over SSH, and you do need to understand this to an extent so
that you know where to set up the SSH client and SSH server, and how to
configure
Ken:
Heya. It sounds as if your client as a low-end firewall
protecting their network of Win2K PC's. GoToMyPC is clever in
that it can easily circumvent low-end firewall appliances (the
tradeoff to the convenience is that all the data during a remote
control session goes thru GoToMyPC's
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