I used 2 VNC's and it worked. I think the 1st time I tried doing VNC to 
VNC I was typing the IP address of PC #2, instead of PC #1, and it would 
kick me out because i was trying to VNC into myself.  That fixes that 
problem. 

Now my next problem.  My laptop will not go above 1024x768 resolution... 
And the PC's that I connect to are 1280x1024. Is there any solution to 
this yet? 

I keep begging the company to get me a new laptop, but they won't, seeing 
as this laptop is only 1.5 years old, and was a whopping $1299 when they 
bought it. :-\





"Dave M" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
06/01/2006 08:12 AM

To
[EMAIL PROTECTED], [email protected]
cc

Subject
RE: Multiple Connections AKA Tunneling...






I think it is because you may be using the same login twice. I dont think 
you can not have the same USER signed into the same machine using remote 
desktop. Try setting up a new user for PC #1 and then when you remote 
desktop in from PC #2, sign in with the new user.

HTH
Dave





>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: Multiple Connections AKA Tunneling...
>Date: Wed, 31 May 2006 10:56:09 -0400
>
>First, a little background...
>
>I use VNC at my company, combined with Remote Desktop Connection to 
tunnel
>from PC to PC on our equipment.  When locally at the equipment, PC #1 is
>the primary "Interface" PC, and PC #2 is the "back end" PC. When we need
>to connect locally from PC #1 to PC #2, we use Remote Desktop to connect,
>because PC #2 has no monitor connected to it (Yes I know KVM Would work
>better, but would be MUCH more involved).
>
>When In House (Being Built & Tested), if we need to remotely access our
>equpiment, we VNC into PC #1, then use Remote Desktop if we need to 
access
>PC #2.
>
>In the field (At Customer Location), we have an issue.  PC #2 is used for
>file transfer, and therefore has an outside network connection. PC #1,
>does not. I can go into the customer's VPN to access our equipment, but I
>have to go through PC #2, since that has the network connection. If I VNC
>into PC #2, I can then remote desktop to PC #1, but the local user's
>monitor goes black (As Remote Desktop can not shadow a session without
>using Windows Server 2003).  When I Remote Desktop into PC #2, and try to
>VNC into PC #1, I get a "The connection has been reset because another
>user has logged on", and then it disconnects my VNC from PC #2.
>
>Does anybody know if I can tunnel/shadow 2 VNC Sessions? about 75% of the
>work that needs to be done remotely needs to be done on PC #1, and 
getting
>another network line run to PC #1 IS NOT an option, nor is temporarily
>swapping cables (Realtime connections that can not be disconnected). Or,
>does anybody know why i get kicked out of a VNC Connection when I run the
>remote desktop?
>
>Thanks in advance, and if it makes it any easier, I can draw up a flow
>chart really quick to explain it a little better.
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