nice to send THIS one to fd, and you ssomehow admit to knowing it here yet, i told you what it was, exactly, dont try make me look bad fag, or i will drop your fucking domain, for a month :) ciao beech,. xd
On 25 January 2012 19:55, Dan Yefimov <d...@lightwave.net.ru> wrote: > On 25.01.2012 5:45, Ben Bucksch wrote: >> On 25.01.2012 00:52, Henri Salo wrote: >>> On Wed, Jan 25, 2012 at 12:47:28AM +0100, Ben Bucksch wrote: >>>> On 25.01.2012 00:09, Dan Kaminsky wrote: >>>>> IP KVM, in which the foreign server basically gets only inbound >>>>> Keyboard and Mouse and outbound uncompressed pixels. >>>> That is *precisely* what VNC is: an open-source IP KVM. >>> What the hell? Seriously.. >>> >>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VNC >> >> hihi. Thanks. >> >> "It transmits the keyboard and mouse events from one computer to >> another, relaying the graphical screen updates back in the other >> direction, over a network." >> "The VNC protocol (RFB) is very simple, based on one graphic primitive >> from server to client ('Put a rectangle of pixel data at the specified >> X,Y position') and event messages from client to server." >> >> Compare to above. >> >> Now, the part where it defines that clipboard is also a standard part of >> VNC... oh, huch, it's not there! (Just a random note that Unicode is >> impossible, but not that clipboard is defined as part of the protocol at >> all.) Ah, I know... Surely, it must be on >> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFB_protocol>... No, same thing there. >> Strange. >> > It should be strictly understood that something not being mentioned in the > Wikipedia article doesn't mean that doesn't exist at all, since Wikipedia is > _not_ authoritative information source. The authoritative information source > would be the formal specification of the protocol explicitly defining the set > of > event types and explicitly prohibiting non-defined event types, otherwise > implementations are free to define and use their own event types being in fact > extensions of the protocol. It's defined nowhere that VNC is _exactly_ > open-source IP KVM and nothing more. > >> P.S. I was just reporting bug. I hope at least some software finds a >> better solution. Have fun. >> > I'd suggest you find alternative product allowing you to explicitly configure > that clipboard is not transmitted to the host under control instead of > struggling with the product limitations and design flaws. > -- > > Sincerely Yours, Dan. > > _______________________________________________ > Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. > Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html > Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/ _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/