On Sat, 05 Sep 2009 13:05:39 +0700
Constantin Kaplinsky wrote:
> Hello Adam,
>
> > Adam Tkac wrote:
>
> > AFAIK the Tight encoding is a mechanism to encapsulate other
> > encodings thus you end with something like a "protocol inside
> > protocol" (The Tight encoding already has many sub-enc
Hello All,
First time poster here. I am considering making the move to VNC
personal. I am mainly needing to access my work printer(s) from my
laptop when I am at home or on the road. I would also like access to
my home computer from my laptop as well. How would I purchase
licenses for this? Wo
I use a mix of personal and free licenses. The Personal edition viewer is
freely downloadable and can access both types of server. You'd need a
license for each machine on which you'll be running the Personal Edition
server.
Bear in mind that you'll need to negotiate a port-forwarding arrangemen
Hi Patrick,
The VNC Personal & Enterprise Edition products are licensed per-desktop, so you
need one license for each desktop you will remotely access using them.
For more details, you can submit a purchase enquiry via http://www.realvnc.com.
Select Buy Now and get a quote for the number of li
Hi DRC,
[snip]
> I haven't seen TRLE and can't seem to find any information on that
> protocol. Is it available in a current release of RealVNC?
[snip]
Hmmm. It's in the IETF Draft, but doesn't seem to have made it into the
current RFB 3.8 protocol spec document.
> One of the problems I ran i
I'm just reporting what I observed. I don't really know the underlying
reasons behind it, either. I see the same effect with the Tight
protocol. I can't get peak performance out of that protocol with tile
sizes less than 64 kpixels.
On Sep 7, 2009, at 8:23 AM, "James Weatherall" wrote
> I'm
Hi DRC,
It makes sense for tile size to affect performance in a *bandwidth* dependent
way, but not for it to affect latency sensitivity. That said, I gather you're
working on a project based on the old VNC 3.3.x codebase, so it may well be
that there's some I/O scheduling issue in that.
HTH,
> It's more common to want to print something locally from the server to
> which you're connected.
This is actually very rare in our business. We frequently print from our
client computers onto the server's printers, but rarely the reverse. I can
also see how a salesperson or on-site technici
Brian,
It seems you have quite a good arrangement, and a great view from the office
;)
as for the printing and VPN issue, I am not sure what you do need is in fact
a terminal session provided by VNC or RDP. Network access (including access
to the printers) is not the solution for your needs?
I'm not the one who was asking about printing to a printer on the server.
I was just giving an example of the variety of uses that remote computing is
making possible. We do, in fact, have our printers mapped across the VPN
and we can print to the remote ones as if they were local on our system
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