cannot connect toI can ping that address from my
work PC just fine.
-Original Message-
From: John E. Peterson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, February 21, 2004 10:31 AM
To: Tom Knowlton; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: VNC from work to home
Yeah. VNC to work. Then run a
Yeah. VNC to work. Then run a viewer on the work computer to VNC (or
attempt) back to yourself.
John
- Original Message -
From: "Tom Knowlton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, February 21, 2004 11:48 AM
Subject: VNC from work to home
> Okay, I am at home n
Hi,
Well basically to get it two work I opened up the port that VNC uses on
my router and gave my public IP address as the address that VNC
connects to, I set the window to 1 on the server (Running Mac OS X) and
set the window number to 1 on the client (also running mac OS X) and I
can now co
Leigh:
Heya. Presuming that both your home and work networks are
connected to the Internet (a safe bet), the answer is "yes, definitely".
As for the exact details of how to do it...that depends
entirely on how the two networks actually connect to the Internet. For
instance...are y
Thats Exactly what i Have done and it works like a dream :-)
On 15 Jan 2004, at 22:42, Mike Weber wrote:
Yes, just enter the IP address of your home PC. If
you are using a router, then you need to config your
router to do port forwarding using port # 5900.
--- Leigh Cocker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wr
Yes, just enter the IP address of your home PC. If
you are using a router, then you need to config your
router to do port forwarding using port # 5900.
--- Leigh Cocker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> I have VNC installed on my Laptop and the sever app
> installed onto my
> Home PC , When