As an alternative, there are many bandwidth meters available but I
use, and am wholly satisfied with, Tautology Bandwidth Meter v1.1
available from...
http://homepages.paradise.net.nz/link/tbm/

You'll need to ensure you check data from the particular Interface
used for your VNC connection. For example, my VNC connection is always
through a Hamachi tunnel. By default Tautology shows data monitored
through my wireless adapter so I must first highlight the Hamachi
interface to check VNC data. 

Kind regards
 
Bill

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of James Weatherall
Sent: 06 February 2006 10:18
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
Subject: RE: Bandwidth Utilisation

VNC Server will print out the number of bytes of update data sent to a
viewer when it exits, so if you enable VNC Server debug logging then
you
could check for that.

Cheers,

Wez @ RealVNC Ltd.
 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Andrew Borland
> Sent: 05 February 2006 19:00
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Bandwidth Utilisation
> 
> Hi,
> 
> Does anyone know of any "bandwidth monitoring tools" that 
> will allow me 
> to work out how much data is transferred during a VNC session, 
> independently of everything else that is going on?
> 
> I'm trying to work out how much of a bite it'll take out of other 
> people's capped ISP bandwidth if I use VNC to support them.
> 
> Regards,  Andrew Borland (UK)
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