Thanks for the info. Pulseaudio seems like a good solution for the moment, since it is already integrated into Ubuntu. My only concern is security since I will be using this to connect the VM with the host it is running on. Ideally I'd like to limit connections between the two, but until sound support gets integrated into the vmm, this is the best solution I'm likely to get.
Brian > It depends on what you're really trying to do. If you just need access to > the audio in your VM the puseaudio sound server can pipe sound across the > network quite easily. LTSP5 actually takes advantage of this. > > Which bring me to what ltsp really is. It's little more than a collection > of linux tools brought together to run thin clients. The little more is > excellent but if you don't want to run thin clients you're much better off > looking at the tools LTSP uses individually. > > if you don't need a gui then SSH is the best way to log in remotely to unix > hands down. > > If you need a gui then X forwarding over SSH is very easy. NX is also worth > looking at. > > As I said before pulseaudio can give you access to audio over the network. > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ThinkGeek and WIRED's GeekDad team up for the Ultimate GeekDad Father's Day Giveaway. ONE MASSIVE PRIZE to the lucky parental unit. See the prize list and enter to win: http://p.sf.net/sfu/thinkgeek-promo _____________________________________________________________________ Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss For additional LTSP help, try #ltsp channel on irc.freenode.net
