changing Mac server port number for main display

2001-10-18 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
could change the VNC connection port (display number) for each of the Windows machines, for the life of me I can't get the display number on the Mac to be anything but 0! Am I missing something? Matthew van Eerde Software Engineer Hispanic Business Inc. HireDiversity.com 805.964.4554 x902 [EMAIL

RE: RE : RE : Problem: WinVNC Server Still Running After "Exit".. .

2001-11-12 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
What about making a batch file like winvnc -kill winvnc -remove winvnc_new install and then running that? -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, November 12, 2001 08:35 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE : RE : Problem: WinVNC Server Still Runn

RE: RE : RE : RE : Problem: WinVNC Server Still Running After "Ex it". . .

2001-11-14 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
What about: upgrade.bat (must be run as administrator) net stop winvnc winvnc -remove winvnc_new -install net start winvnc -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2001 08:07 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE : RE : RE : Problem

RE: vnc-list-digest V1 #1333

2001-11-14 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
What about having a "partial screen refresh" option? The interface would have to have an escape key combination combined with mouse dragging that would allow the client to select a portion of the screen, which would then be refreshed. That should ameliorate the UDP unreliability "missing patch"

RE: Windows XP

2001-11-20 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
VNC provides no features for remote printing, or even file copying. You could: Take a screenshot with Alt-Print Screen (from your home environment, not on your work computer - VNC may need to be not the active screen to accomplish this) then paste the screen shot into Word and print that. or P

RE: Password Protect Change Password

2001-11-30 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
How about creating a registry merge file that is the vnc branch with the correct password hash setting? Then all she would have to do is double-click on the merge file to reset the password. -Original Message- From: Jonathan Morton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, November 30, 20

RE: firewall woes

2001-12-14 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
Can you telnet to 11.11.11.11 port 5900 from the client machine? -Original Message- From: Nate Harel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2001 19:14 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: firewall woes Hi all, I have set up a router/firewall in front of a small network. I w

RE: Serve Side scaling

2001-12-21 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
The main goal is to allow clients with 1200 x 900 screens to increase workspace size when connecting to a 800 x 600 server - or to allow clients with a 800 x 600 screen to see the whole picture at once when connecting to a 1200 x 900 server (full-screen mode requires scrolling.) Compression is no

RE: Providing (Windows) VNC support to clients that have strict c orporate firewalls

2002-01-16 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
There is a documented setting in the VNC Server to allow internal loopback connections. I don't remember what it is offhand, but it is described in the section detailing how to create a secure connection. > -Original Message- > From: Michael Ossmann [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Wed

RE: Connecting to multiple servers on one network

2002-01-25 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
Can you telnet to port 5801/5901 on B from the outside? From the inside? Is the machine B address correct on the router? > -Original Message- > From: Nate Harel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Friday, January 25, 2002 12:14 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: Connecting to multiple

RE: Connecting to multiple servers on one network

2002-01-25 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
Type telnet 192.168.0.10 5800 (space, not colon) > -Original Message- > From: Nate Harel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Friday, January 25, 2002 13:45 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: RE: Connecting to multiple servers on one network > > > How do I telnet to a particular port? >

RE: Problem Connecting through Linksys router

2002-01-29 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
Are you trying to take over your office machine from home, or your home machine from the office? Whichever way, you need to turn port-forwarding on on the router that is at the other location than you are. That is, if you're at home trying to take over your office computer, you need to need to se

RE: Win 98 setup?

2002-01-30 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
Dial into a machine. Then, while dialed in, run winipcfg both on the host machine and the client machine and make a note of the IP addresses listed for the PPP adapter. Hopefully the host machine will have the same IP address every time and you can use that to run the vncviewer. 127.0.0.1 is a

RE: Win 98 setup?

2002-01-30 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
AOL does use TCP/IP, over a dial-up modem. TCP/IP is the only protocol used to connect to the Internet, regardless of whether it's through a modem or a network card. You usually cannot choose an IP address, it is granted to you by your Internet Service Provider (AOL in this case.) I recall AOL

RE: web page

2002-01-30 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
It may be possible to hex-edit the winvnc.exe file to change the HTML code. I brought it up in my hex editor and found the HTML quite easily. > -Original Message- > From: Alex Angelopoulos [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2002 15:13 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subje

RE: web page

2002-01-30 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
That wouldn't be that hard: Here's the original page (from View Source) VNC desktop [host name] where I have changed [host name], [width] and [height]. Substitute your own values for these. Create another page (on another server, or even a simple .html file) VNC desktop [host name]

RE: setting up vnc

2002-04-01 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
You may have to purchase a pair of low-end ethernet cards and a crossover cable. > -Original Message- > From: Ronald Tatum [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Monday, April 01, 2002 09:58 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: setting up vnc > > > If what you surmise is so, I'd be *very*

RE: java.net Error

2002-05-06 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
You need to add port 5800 for the java client to connect to the VNC server. The port 5800 is only necessary to make the initial web connection - if you have the standalone executable on your client machine you can dispense with port 5800. In either case, whether you use the standalone executable

RE: Password on command line

2002-05-17 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
You can save the connection info as a configuration file, optionally including the password. Then you can use a switch to specify a configuration file in the shortcut. > -Original Message- > From: Harty, Brook [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Friday, May 17, 2002 14:24 > To: [EMAIL PRO

RE: File Transfer with WinVNC?

2002-05-20 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
Another option is to set up a company FTP server - then you have a central log of all traffic back and forth. It does require setting up an FTP client you're comfortable with on the VNC client. Also, make sure not to allow anonymous uploads or you'll be sure to be abused. Also, firewall conside

Mac OS X VNC

2002-05-21 Thread Matthew . van . Eerde
Is there any version of VNC (server/viewer) that runs on Mac OS X? - To unsubscribe, mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the line: 'unsubscribe vnc-list' in the message BODY See also: http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/intouch.html --