Dustin:
Heya. There are two possible solutions to the Vista UAC issue:
* as admin, install EchoVNC as a service. When the UAC messages appear,
EchoVNC will attempt to auto-reconnect to the weird console session in
which
that security message is displayed. That way, it will appear to the
remote user.
Once the UAC message is cleared, EchoVNC will attempt to reconnect to
the
main remote session. This only works with EchoVNC, and only when it's
installed as a service; otherwise it does not have privilege to remote
the UAC
message window.
* Install a more modern VNC server alongside EchoVNC (e.g., RealVNC),
and
configure EchoVNC to "offload" it's VNC sessions to that server,
rather than
handle them itself. In this way, EchoVNC just helps make the
connection, then
it gets out of the way.
cheers,
Scott
On Jun 3, 2009, at 10:08 AM, D. Brinks wrote:
> On an unrelated note, when connecting to a Vista client, how do you
> get around those annoying "Windows needs your permission" prompts.
> Which are not visible to the remote session?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Dustin
>
<snip>
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