Two bounties are now available for enhancing WinVNC, with initial funds 
provided by Cendio:

WinVNC easily crashes on Windows XP/7
https://www.bountysource.com/issues/1359656-winvnc-easily-crashes-on-windows-xp-7
Current bounty: $200

WinVNC service mode does not work on Windows 7
https://www.bountysource.com/issues/1359657-winvnc-service-mode-does-not-work-on-windows-7
Current bounty: $400

Let's try to fix this. Developers, are you interested? Users, do you want 
to support this work by adding funds?

Regards,
Peter

On Fri, 13 Dec 2013, Peter Astrand wrote:

>
> Hi. Yes, we are aware of that WinVNC needs some work. Unfortunately, we at
> Cendio does not have any time to work on this now. Thus, unless someone
> else volunteers to fix this, three options remains:
>
> 1. Do nothing, keep it anyway. Might be useful to some people, for example
> those running Windows XP.
>
> 2. Remove it.
>
> 3. Sponsor someone else to fix it.
>
> Although we do not use WinVNC at Cendio, we understand that it's an
> important component, so 3) is what remains. My plan is to post a project
> on https://www.bountysource.com/ next week, hoping to attract someone that
> can do this work, and possibly other sponsors. Goal for the project would
> be to get the same level of functionality on Windows 7 as is already
> available on Windows XP.
>
> Does this make sense?
>
> Regards,
> Peter
>
> On Mon, 9 Dec 2013, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> As I said before, given that I'm only just starating out with this
>> thing (TigerVNC) I shouldn't really be throwing out suggestions to
>> the developers at this point, but as that has never stopped me
>> before...
>>
>> I'm not sure what the target market / user base is for this package,
>> but if the developers hope to make this into a mainstream mass market
>> kind of thing, then I do believe that it would be most helpful to make
>> it rather more of a "no brainer", specifically on the Windows (server)
>> side.
>>
>> I mean seriously, in an ideal universe, I'd just be able to tell my
>> friend Jessica in Palm Beach (who has very meager understanding of
>> computers generally, and who I would like to be able to help, remotely,
>> with her occasional computer glitches) "Look, go to this web site,
>> download this thing, install it, following the prompts, tell me the
>> password, and then I'll connect to you and get your problem sorted out."
>>
>> I dunno if any of you folks have ever interacted with Dell software
>> support, but this is pretty much how their system works.  They tell
>> you to run this (pre-installed) then and they give you a magic cookie
>> and then within 5 minutes they are controlling your Windows PC and
>> are seeing everything that you are seeing.  It's smooth, a no-brainer,
>> and it works.  I know.  I've seen it.  The Windows end-luser doesn't
>> have to diddle around with any firewall settings, and in fact never
>> even has to set-up a password.
>>
>> And as long as I'm on this rant, allow me to just mention a couple
>> of other unexpected oddities that cropped up as I was trying to get
>> this thing going on the Windows (server) side...
>>
>> After receiveing a clue or three here on this list, I properly ran
>> the Windows server configurator tool/thingy and set a password and
>> other options.  (Actually, I _did not_ set any other options, because
>> all of the defaults looked entirely sensible to me.)  Then I did what
>> I almost always do with newly installed programs on my Windows system
>> that I may want to re-run later on... I put a fresh shortcut/icon on
>> my desktop for the thing... in this case the TigerVNC (User-mode) server
>> itself.  Of course, then I wanted to run the thing, so I double clicked
>> it.  Nothing happened.  This is often an indication that I failed to
>> tap that second click in fast enough to make Windows happy.  So what
>> did I do?  (What would _you_ do?)  I double-clicked the thing again,
>> of course.
>>
>> Well, come to find out a bit later on that the effect of all this was
>> that (unbeknownst to me) I ended up having not one but *two* copies of
>> the TigerVNC server running on the Windows system simultaneously!  Yikes!
>> I quickly rebooted in order to clean out this flotsam, and thus returned
>> to a more normal state, but the more I think about it, the more the very
>> notion of having two of these things running at the same time is deeply
>> puzzling.  I mean why didn't the second one notice that there was one
>> copy already running (and just exit)?  And perhaps even more mysteriously,
>> how the bleep could two of these even manage to run (without one of them
>> erroring out) anyway?  Maybe this is just my UNIX networking experience
>> getting in the way of my understanding (of Windows networking) again,
>> but where I come from, if a given server process starts listening to/on
>> a given port, that port becomes the exclusive property of that specific
>> process for as long as the process is running.  If some other process
>> starts up and tries to listen to that port also, it should get an error,
>> either in the call to socket() or in the call to listen().  So anyway,
>> _something_ is wrong with this picture, and I'll be damned if I know
>> what it is.  Is the second running instance of the TigerVNC server (on
>> Windows) failing to receive proper errors from the kernel, or is it
>> receiving them but then (improperly) ignoring them?
>>
>>
>> Regards,
>> rfg
>>
>>
>> P.S.  Oh!  And by the way, the _way_ I found out that I had two running
>> instances of the TigerVNC srever on my Win7 systems was _not_ via the
>> method that one would expect.  Sure, I could have looked and seen this
>> odd state of affairs in the Task Manager process list, but I didn't.
>> In fact I would never have known what had happened if I hadn't, on a
>> whim, taken a quick look at the baby-sized icons that reside over toward
>> the right hand side of the task bar.  (I'm not really a Windows guy so
>> I don't even know what the proper name for these things is/are.  Are those
>> called "notifications"?)  Anyway, I clicked on the little up-arrow that
>> always appears just to the left of those things, and then clicked on
>> "Configure" and started scrolling down through the list of notification
>> do-dads that I could configure.  It was then that I noticed that there
>> were _two_ of these things in the list, each with a little tiger-face
>> icon attached to it.  That's how I deduced that I must have been running,
>> totally unintentionally, two separate instances of the TigerVNC server
>> at the same time on the Windows box.
>>
>> (I'm still sitting here scratching my head, trying to figure out what
>> the semantics would be of having two of these running in parallel on a
>> single Windows box.)
>>
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>
>
>
> ---
> Peter Astrand         ThinLinc Chief Developer
> Cendio AB             http://cendio.com
> Teknikringen 8                http://twitter.com/ThinLinc
> 583 30 Linkoping      http://facebook.com/ThinLinc
> Phone: +46-13-214600  http://google.com/+CendioThinLinc
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Rapidly troubleshoot problems before they affect your business. Most IT
> organizations don't have a clear picture of how application performance
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>


---
Peter Astrand           ThinLinc Chief Developer
Cendio AB               http://cendio.com
Teknikringen 8          http://twitter.com/ThinLinc
583 30 Linkoping        http://facebook.com/ThinLinc
Phone: +46-13-214600    http://google.com/+CendioThinLinc

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rapidly troubleshoot problems before they affect your business. Most IT 
organizations don't have a clear picture of how application performance 
affects their revenue. With AppDynamics, you get 100% visibility into your 
Java,.NET, & PHP application. Start your 15-day FREE TRIAL of AppDynamics Pro!
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