You could; but you then MUST be able to connect to port 180 to actually *use* VNC; connecting to the web interface only serves you the Java applet, which then interacts over the standard VNC display 100 ports higher.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Kyle Yamnitz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Tuesday, 2002-03-19 12:24 Subject: Re: VNC through port 80? - having problems : > The web browser is set to 100 ports below the standard VNC port, and *only* : > uses that port for serving the web page (it switches to the "other" VNC port : > for the actual VNC session) so trying to factor that in would require an : > extra open port. : : If that's the case, could I set the port in the server to 180, then the : web server would be working on port 80? Then perhaps I can access VNC in : a web browser with just http://ip_address. : : > I'm not sure what you would need to put in the viewer; as a guess, if -5820 : > doesn't work, you can also try : > 59716 : > (this comes from -5820+65536) : : I'll give all that a try too. Thanks, : --Kyle Yamnitz : The Lesson Plans Page: : http://www.LessonPlansPage.com : --------------------------------------------------------------------- : 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 : --------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------- 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 ---------------------------------------------------------------------