>A robust solution to these problems is to have the VNC client recognize two
>key-strokes, perhaps user-definable. One keystroke is the pass-through
>keystroke that tells VNC to send the next keystroke to the remote machine. The
>next keystroke could be anything at all, including another passthrough
>keystroke or a Ctrl+Alt+Del or anything else -- whatever it is, it should be
>sent to the remote machine. The other keystroke is the "ignore" keystroke in
>which case the next keystroke, whatever it is, is ignored by VNC and given to
>the local machine.
This already works with the UNIX vncviewer - the F8 key brings up a
contextual menu from which the viewer can be controlled, the keypress
ignored, or the F8 key passed through to the server.
BTW, the correct sequence for getting out of full-screen mode on Windows is
Ctrl-Esc Esc - did you try sending those keystrokes, or were they just (as
I suspect) swallowed by Windows before the VNC client even saw them?
--------------------------------------------------------------
from: Jonathan "Chromatix" Morton
mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (not for attachments)
big-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
uni-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The key to knowledge is not to rely on people to teach you it.
Get VNC Server for Macintosh from http://www.chromatix.uklinux.net/vnc/
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