:: James ''Wez'' Weatherall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
:: X uses two different clipboard formats, only one of which is directly
:: supported by Xvnc.
: "Ehud Karni" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
: After your email I checked it with xterm and found that it worked. I
: could paste into the Xvnc xterm and when I m
Jonathan:
Thanks for the info but what about question 2 you did not give a reply
2. Also, how do I relate a machine name to the current ip address of each
workstation? We are using DHCP because static ip would be too hard to
manage.
This is what I need.
For example Irvin High School Atten
>1. Can I run the VNC Server off our file server instead of installing it on
>each workstation? This would save me a lot of foot work. I have over 2500
>users at 86 schools plus all of the admin. users.
The VNC Server needs to run on the workstation being controlled - this is
the only way it ca
Hey everyone, I finally talked the network supervisor into using VNC to
enhance our support desk. This will save me a lot of driving to correct
printing and other user problems but I have a question.
We are running netware 4.1 and 4.2 for servers and the workstations are
windows 95 and 98 for n
Kurt:
SUCCESS! After endless screwing around and trying everything I could think
of, I got WinVNC to work!
On the SERVER: I had to enter a password in the server properties windows.
Otherwise, everything was set to the default. I used the WinVNC App Mode,
after running the Dialup Server.
On
On Thu, 3 May 2001 13:30:29 +0100, James ''Wez'' Weatherall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> X uses two different clipboard formats, only one of which is directly
> supported by Xvnc.
>
> Which application can't you paste into? Pasting into Xterms, for example,
> inside an Xvnc session, from appl
> Interesting thought, I wonder if any corporations have enough sense to
close
> these potential holes? Is anyone compelling their employees to secure
their
> home machines which are accessing corporate VPNs?
How do you plan to close these potential holes?
The only way a corporate network can do
Angus Macleod writes:
>Concerning paranoia, I think that it is not only reasonable, but necessary
>to protect your home PC or network with some sort of firewall (or NAT
>server) if you are also one of those people who has an "always on"
>connection and who accesses their corporate network from hom
Kurt: I'm afraid I don't know how to ping or access an open share. (I don't
know what an open share is.) Sorry to be so dense about this stuff. A few
years ago, I was able to us pcAnywhere, so I may have to go back to that if I
can't get this to work.
Here's what I'm doing...
For the purpose
>But that does prompt the question of whether vncPatches68k for alpha 4
>works fine with alpha 5 (now that the server has some similar functionality
>to the rect-buffering/splitting in vncPatches68k - does it cause some kind
>of odd timing problems if both the patches and the server try to do this
At 07:00 20/04/2001, you wrote:
>I've written a patch for VNC that provide mouse-wheel support in the Win32
>vncviewer.exe program. Patched binaries of the AT&T and Tridia vncviewer.exe
>files, as well as source diffs for both distributions are available at:
>
>http://www.auctix.com/vnc/
>
>Feedb
> Fixes authentication bugs as noted by Adrian Umpleby,
You'll be really pleased to hear that it's not convenient for me to
download and scrutinise your code until after the bank holiday.
You can have a bit of a breather for a few days... ;-)
But that does prompt the question of whether vncPat
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