To: "Harold Fuchs" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2005 2:46 PM
Subject: Re: Audio?
Not with Win2K Pro. However, if the remote machine is WinXP Pro, or Windows Server 2003, you can use Remote Desktop (RDP) to log in remotely. This not only brings the sounds locally, but you will have direct access to both the local and remote drives for file transfer, and printing from applications on the remote box can go to your local printer.
Another point, however, is that VNC and RDP do not play well together...
rdp is pretty slick, and has one monumental important feature that until rdp only vnc had, a plain text, autoloading, config file.
ie: you can have a cgi on a web site that generates vnc (or rdp) config files that the user can "click on" and boom they are in. Awsome for getting into remote sites that have dhcp dsl/cable connections and easier & more reliable than dyndns, sort of home grown dyndns without bothering with DNS at all. Remote machine just sends a little netcat or wget request to trigger a the cgi from cron or windows scheduler, cgi overwrites a index.html and one or more .vnc files in a per-customer directory in htdocs. Then you have a web page that has a "login" button that always works, with no dyndns.org and the cron job is much lighter simpler and thus more reliable than any of the dyndns updaters I ever saw. I've been using tightvnc and this cgi to give myself convenient access to all my clients for years. Can't do any such thing with pcanywhere. Only recently I discovered rdp has a plain text config file that auto-launches the client just like tightvnc's .vnc files. This means you can do the same thing with rdp and no need to install extra software most of the time.
Bad thing though:
You log in via rdp, you gain control of the session and begin to work, and Bang, you can be ejected without any warning at any time by someone else logging in. It doesn't ask you "shall I let this jerk take over?" It doesn't warn the new connection "someone is logged in are you sure you want to crash them out ungracefully?" It doesn't have the ability to share the session, it just lets the new connection blast away the existing connection without blinking.
Also, I can and do connect to the vnc sites from my palmos phone, any of my unix/linux/bsd/mac boxes... I think there is actually a rdp client for linux, but I doubt for palmos, and I doubt it would be easy for me to build the linux client under sco which I actually use 99% more than linux, etc... as slick as rdp is, it's still just more typical swill from bill.
Harold Fuchs wrote:
I run VNC viewer and connect to my server.
I run a server-side web browser that connects to a radio station.
The sound from the station is audible through the server's speakers.
Is there some way to make the sound available through the viewer's speakers?
I'm using VNC 4.0 on Windows 2000 Pro.
Harold Fuchs Time files like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana. _______________________________________________ VNC-List mailing list [email protected] To remove yourself from the list visit: http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list_______________________________________________ VNC-List mailing list [email protected] To remove yourself from the list visit: http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list
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