This Linux Journal article describes running VNC as the primary interface for you machines, allowing you to see the same, persistent desktop from any machine. The downside is that even at the console you don't get the advantages of accelleration and the like, making it sucky for games and video and generally rather slow. However as a screen-for-X I like the idea.
http://www.linuxjournal.com/article.php?sid=5499 I'm wondering if there's a way to insert VNC into an already-active session. The Windows VNC server does just this, allowing you to tap into your existing session. -- Rev Simon Rumble <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> www.rumble.net Think: In which world is speech most free: 1) A world where you can send single personal messages to anyone, but can't send multiple copies of the same message to people who haven't authorized you spending their resources that way. 2) A world where you only can send messages to people who have explicitly authorized you to do so. If we win the fight against spammers, we get world 1. If we lose, we get world 2. - Per Abrahamsen on slashdot -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ More Info: http://lists.slug.org.au/listinfo/slug
