se, check the Connection tab allows
connections from the right subnet (allowing 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0 is a
safe bet) and check your firewall allows the port through. If you have some
baroque "Security Suite" you'll need to fathom out the procedure for opening
ports.
Philip Herli
I'm extremely rusty with all things Unix, and I've never played with Linux,
but this might help.
https://www.ccs.uky.edu/docs/cluster/env.html
Philip Herlihy
Email: phi...@herlihy.eu.com
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@r
7;ve never
learned).
Philip Herlihy
Email: phi...@herlihy.eu.com
Tel: 020 8521 9157
Mobile: 07931 546660
Fax: 0870 0511055
-Original Message-
From: John Cunniff [mailto:johncunn...@gmail.com]
Sent: 05 April 2012 23:59
To: 'Philip Herlihy'
Su
That's great. Well done.
I use the Sun Java, from www.java.com, but that's just through following
links that have been offered at various times. Never had a problem. In
Firefox, I believe Java is a separate plug-in.
Philip Herlihy
Email: phi...@herlihy.eu.com
Tel: 020
pe:
ipconfig
... and look for a line beginning "IP Address" or "IPV4 Address". Look for
addresses starting 10.0.0. and you'll soon spot what you need.
HTH
Philip Herlihy
Email: phi...@herlihy.eu.com
Tel: 020 8521 9157
Mobile: 07931 546660
, which use a smart
server up there in the cloud to avoid all this complexity. Logmein is one
such, I believe, and there are others (GoToMyPC?). Might suit you well,
perhaps.
Good luck!
Philip Herlihy
Email: phi...@herlihy.eu.com
Tel: 020 8521 9157
Mobile: 07931 546660
quot; or "virtual server".
You may find that Xfinity customer support are able to help if you are
eligible for phone support perhaps.
Philip Herlihy
Email: phi...@herlihy.eu.com
Tel: 020 8521 9157
Mobile: 07931 546660
Fax: 0870 0511055
-Original M
nection out to a
'listening' client. Watch out for firewalls!
Philip Herlihy
Email: phi...@herlihy.eu.com
Tel: 020 8521 9157
Mobile: 07931 546660
Fax: 0870 0511055
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@re
s)
* Is your firewall set to allow winvnc4.exe to allow incoming connections?
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of Dan Riebs
Sent: 19 January 2012 20:05
To: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: Installing VNC
are you? To be avoided if possible.
Check in Task Manager - if Peak Commit Charge becomes greater than Physical
Memory, the machine will have been paging out idle processes, and this might
include VNC server or maybe (?) networking components.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From:
Why is it that sometimes you have to set Caps-Lock on your local keyboard to
get lower-case characters on the remote machine? Is there a fix?
Philip Herlihy
___
VNC-List mailing list
VNC-List@realvnc.com
To remove yourself from the list visit
Might be worth checking your mouse settings - there's an option to "hide
cursor when typing" that might be responsible for this. Check server and
viewer.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] O
Yes it can be blocked. Any decent firewall can block an outgoing port as
well as an incoming one, and a properly secured system will have blocked
anything not positively known to be needed.
Good luck!
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: Paul Dunn [mailto:sa212+...@cyconix.com
secure
one. You won't make any progress on this without authorisation, and that
will be hard to get. I must say if a VNC client could get access to medical
information simply by Googling for the details, something would be very
wrong.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list
70a3a5cd55.skydrive.live.com/self.aspx/Public/VNCloop.cmd
http://cid-2e572770a3a5cd55.skydrive.live.com/self.aspx/Public/VNCloop.cmd
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of Geza Levai
Sent: 25 February 2010 23:
I've used RealVNC in mixed environments recently. It seems you only need to
pay for the software if it contains a server - the viewers can be downloaded
separately and run without charge. So, you can download whichever viewer is
appropriate for the platform (and run it on 7), and it should intera
chitecture in these later versions of Windows.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of Chris R. Johnson
Sent: 16 December 2009 19:45
To: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: how to remote to clients PC for trouble
Used to be the case, but a single colon works these days. Try it!
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of John Aldrich
Sent: 18 November 2009 19:05
To: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: Re: Accessing more
u can do this many times, for
many machines. To access the machine you want, simply append a colon and
the port number to the router's IP at the client. So, if you were
connecting now to a VNC server at 111.222.333.444 you'd instead use
111.222.333.444:5901.
Philip Herlihy, Londo
Have you tried right-clicking the item and picking "run as administrator"?
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of Leo JB
Sent: 17 October 2009 02:54
To: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: cannot
Worth commenting that there are a number of routers which claim to work with
DynDNS while DynDNS say they don't work correctly.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: Kevan Rehm [mailto:kr...@visi.com]
Sent: 14 October 2009 02:03
To: Philip Herlihy; vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subjec
o the host of the listening client; you would only need to port-forward
5800 or 5900 if you are trying to reach a server (rather than client) from
outside the LAN.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of Kevan
No, I didn't waste my time. The parameter you refer to has a default of 1
Hr (3600 seconds) and under "difficult" network conditions connections stay
up a LOT less than that!
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun
; but it didn't
stop VNC from dropping out. VNC seems more prone to dropouts that Remote
Desktop, which also makes up to 20 attempts to reconnect, but Remote Desktop
doesn't have the Listening Client facility, which can be a godsend.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message---
No experience of this, sorry.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: Christopher Woods [mailto:christop...@custommade.org.uk]
Sent: 28 September 2009 11:30
To: 'Roberto Meza'; phi...@herlihy.eu.com
Cc: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: RE: No-IP and Real VNC on multiple PC
my script? Grateful for any further clarification you can offer on this -
as the perceived "unreliability" of VNC connections in some situations has
led me to use RDC whenever that's an option.
Philip Herlihy
Email: phi...@herlihy.eu.com
Tel: 020 8521 9157
Mobile:
.
Philip Herlihy
From: Roberto Meza [mailto:roberto_mez...@hotmail.com]
Sent: 27 September 2009 16:57
To: phi...@herlihy.eu.com
Cc: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: RE: No-IP and Real VNC on multiple PC's
This tutorial is
TWO colons if you are using anything other than
the default port, so your address should be: papeleria.no-ip.org::5901
Philip Herlihy
From: Roberto Meza [mailto:roberto_mez...@hotmail.com]
Sent: 27 September 2009 15:15
ng to be configured. At the other end NAT would take care of
things without intervention. Which is why listening clients are so useful,
and in some situations a huge advantage over Remote Desktop, which can't do
this.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@r
to the
router on port 8903 or port 8904 and the router will send the connection to
10.0.0.3 or 10.0.0.4 respectively, while translating the port on the LAN side
to 5900.
Caveat: I’m no networking guru!
Philip Herlihy
One of the most useful features of VNC is the facility to set up a reverse
connection, initiated from the server to a listening client. Providing the
router at the client end can be configured to pass through port 5500, there
is no need to mess with firewalls and routers at the server end. As the
You may find this helpful:
http://portforward.com/
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of Dale Eshelman
Sent: 26 September 2009 02:55
To: Christopher Woods
Cc: 'Bob Grabbe'; vnc-list@realvnc.c
to which
you're connected. You'd probably want to transfer the printable file (or
maybe a printable version) and kick off the print job on the remote machine.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf
tions on
other ports (add a double-colon and the port number after the address in the
client's address box) and have the router configured to route it to the
preferred machine, translating the port to 5900, the standard one for VNC.
If your router can't do that, then you can configure VN
port to check manually if the
server is running (task manager or spot the icon) then that one line may be
all you need in a simple script. Lord knows when I'll get round to doing
the modification to my script, but I doubt it'll turn out to be any more
difficult than what worked well for
On XP machines I've set up a script which invokes a connection to a
listening client:
>vinvnc4.ext - connect MyClientHost.MyDomain.com
- very useful. This doesn't work on Vista. Can anyone advise on how I'd do
the equivalent from a command-line or command-file? The Vista box has VNC
running
Not an expert in this forum, but I thought I'd venture an opinion:
Almost certainly not. To use VNC you have to have a "server" process
running on the machine you want to control. Servers are available for
Windows (the Personal Edition covers Vista) and the Mac (Enterprise version)
etc, but for
Overnight, the problem simply went away.
How weird is that? (Rebooting hadn't fixed it). I was all set to reinstall
the graphics drivers.
Phil
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of Philip Herlihy
Sent: 04 June 20
n2K, B runs Win2K and C runs XP.
Phil
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of Philip Herlihy
Sent: 03 June 2009 23:44
To: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: Cursor weirdness
I'm trying to connect tonight to a machine I
I'm trying to connect tonight to a machine I've accessed many hundreds of
times. Nothing has changed that I'm aware of, except that the pointer
doesn't seem to be in the right place. I can't click on things, and I've
just noticed that when I move the mouse I get the familiar dot and also a
flicke
Correction (sorry):
Netsh firewall set icmpsetting, REM doesn't change anything, just shows
options
... Should be:
Netsh firewall set icmpsetting & REM doesn't change anything, just shows
options
(ampersand, not comma)
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From:
Something else I found: Try this in a command prompt (XP SP1+):
Netsh firewall show icmpsetting
Netsh firewall set icmpsetting, REM doesn't change anything, just shows
options.
See: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/875357
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: Philip He
his
particular jam. See: http://www.dslreports.com/faq/2520
Is this likely to be relevant here? I could do with someone who actually
knows more than I can find on Google to share some experience!
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-lis
Have tried lowering resolution, but to no avail.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com [mailto:vnc-list-boun...@realvnc.com] On
Behalf Of Dale Eshelman
Sent: 14 May 2009 17:25
To: 'Philip Herlihy'; vnc-list@realvnc.com; james.weather...@real
Thanks, Wez,
In fact both routes use WiFi for the last leg, but your point about MTU is
an interesting one. How do I assess the "real and imaginary" MTUs?
(Offline for 24 hours from now, but still interested!)
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: James Weatherall
Thanks, Wez - however, in response to guidance you gave me once before I
already have that setting enabled.
What puzzles me is that either route is using the same links, so it's hard
to understand what the difference might be.
Philip Herlihy
-Original Message-
From: vnc-list
Recent came across a situation again which has puzzled me in the past. I'm
trying to connect to a machine running VNC Free edition in an office. I can
make the connection (having set up port forwarding on the router) but it
hangs, with only the top third of the screen visible after several minute
Clarification:
I provide a shortcut on their desktop which connects their VNC server to my
listening client.
(That could have been very misleading!)
Phil
-Original Message-
Message: 4
From: "Philip Herlihy"
To: "'Roger Withnell'" ,
Subject: RE: Connecti
ns. I provide a shortcut
on their desktop which runs the listening client.
HTH
Phil
-Original Message-
From: Roger Withnell [mailto:ro...@upperbridge.co.uk]
Sent: 25 January 2009 16:40
To: 'Philip Herlihy'; vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: RE: Connecting to a server behind a router
Two alternatives:
1) Configure your router to forward any incoming connection using the
relevant port (5800 for the web browser connection) to the computer hosting
VNC. See www.portforward.com for help with this (and your router's
manual!). Most routers provide this facility, although terminolo
Oops! One thing we are supposed to do is change the subject to something
more useful!
No more to add otherwise - will be interesting to see if others have
anything to add.
Phil
_
From: PRIMETYME [mailto:char...@primetymepro.com]
Sent: 23 January 2009 17:07
To: Philip Herlihy
Cc
olk reading this who have!
Best wishes,
Phil
_
From: PRIMETYME [mailto:char...@primetymepro.com]
Sent: 23 January 2009 16:12
To: Philip Herlihy
Subject: RE: VNC-List digest, Vol 1 #2593 - 2 msgs
Phil thank you for replying to my question. However, it's not crystal clear
yet so I would
Sounds like you're a bit confused about how this works (we've all been
there!).
If you want to connect to a remote machine so you can view and operate it
from a local machine, then you have to install and configure the VNC
_server_ on the remote machine. I always configure the server to remove th
Sent: 13 January 2009 10:26
To: 'Philip Herlihy'; vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: RE: Network delays, hanging
Hi Philip,
In that case I'd recommend setting the "Rate limit pointer-events" option in
the VNC Viewer's Inputs tab - this causes significantly fewer pointer ev
:rkoy...@gmail.com]
Sent: 12 January 2009 13:44
To: Philip Herlihy
Cc: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: Re: Network delays, hanging
sounds like a simple matter of bandwidth. RDP takes much less
bandwidth than VNC (since it's just sending command strings versus
repainting the screen) so is more effi
ere) but what is puzzling is that Remote Desktop
does work, albeit fairly slowly.
Phil
(away from my desk now for several hours)
-Original Message-
From: Ryo Koyama [mailto:rkoy...@gmail.com]
Sent: 12 January 2009 13:16
To: Philip Herlihy
Cc: vnc-list@realvnc.com
Subject: Re: Network
I support several friends using RealVNC (free edition). In one situation, I
can connect successfully using Remote Desktop, but if I try to use RealVNC
the connections stalls, and often drops. Any thoughts?
(Second post - no replies to the first one!)
PH
___
I've been using RealVNC successfully for some time. I now want to help a
friend and find I can get a reliable connection using Remote Desktop but not
using RealVNC. The connection starts up ok, but is either very slow, or
hangs, eventually disconnecting. Any thoughts?
Phil, London
58 matches
Mail list logo