I have been reading the many posts that pertain to hiding the system tray
icon and have seen the "official" position of RealVNC. I have just one
question. I work for a company that uses RealVNC for working on remote
computers and the icon is never on the system tray even when a technician
working
I have read all the info from the site that talks about connecting to
machines behind a router and I have done it successful for some time now. I
am needing to make sure I can connect to multiple computer behind the same
router. I have read the information that is also posted on the site about
th
Thanks for the input about the connection behind a router. I have it up and
running. I have one other question though and then I should be set.
--> Since I am using IPs and ports I want to save the configurations. I
tried the options button on the interface and then save, but when I double
I think that I have read all of the previous posts but correct me if I miss
anything. I have run in to similar problem but with Norton. What I found
is that the firewall setting were reset back to the defaults on the
reinstall and beings that anti-virus programs are designed to KEEP THINGS
OUT, n
I have a similar situation. What I did was set each machine Real VNC to
accept connections from a certain port. Then I forwarded the port to that
machine that was accepting connections to that port. It works and I have 4
different machines that accept Real VNC. The only problem that I found was
I have a machine that I connect to that is used as a desktop. If someone is
on that machine and I try to log in, it either logs them off (Windows) or
disconnects me. Does this sound familiar to anyone? I have another machine
in the same network as my trouble machine with the exact same settings
That is a subject that can be answered the FAQs. Basically no it can't be
removed or the color changed. There are some articles that discuss it and
you can "remove" the icon from the taskbar by customizing the taskbar but my
experiences have seen it reappear upon connection to the machine.
Jeff
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: VNC Setup
Im using Windows XP on computers.
>From: "Jeff Glaspie" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: "'Jason Birchmeier'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: RE: VNC Setup
>Date: Sat, 10 Feb 2007 23:59:30 -0600
>
>Are yo
I have a problem getting the ctrl+alt+del to work in the login screen of my
windows 2000 pro box. It works fine it I am already logged into the machine
but I have to leave the machine insecure. Can some one suggest what I am
doing wrong??
Jeff
___
VNC-
d FAQ.
> -Message d'origine-
> De : Jeff Glaspie [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Envoyi : vendredi 20 fivrier 2004 17:57
> @ : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Objet : (no subject)
>
> I have a problem getting the ctrl+alt+del to work in the login screen of
my
> windows 2000 pro b
In order to have your machine accessible from behind your router you need to
open a port for it to use and you need to used the ip address that is
assigned to the router.
1. Open the admin functions in your router, look and see the ip address
that is assigned to the router (it will not be a 192.1
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