Re: [newbie] ssh + X forwarding to Windows

2003-11-28 Thread Bryan Phinney
On Thursday 27 November 2003 07:57 pm, David E. Fox wrote: > > Well, if you are tunneling X, it would be display 0, not 1. You would be > > much better off to use TightVNC since it supports compression and also > > has a > > Actually I figured part of it out, and was able to start gtkatlantic and

Re: [newbie] ssh + X forwarding to Windows

2003-11-27 Thread Jerry Barton
On Thu, 27 Nov 2003 16:57:46 -0800 (PST) [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David E. Fox) wrote: > vnc server is where? I have vnc installed on the Windows side, and I'd > have to do the setup remotely. urpmi tightvnc-server HTH -- _||_ Registered linux user #300600 (o_ Registered linux machine # 185855

Re: [newbie] ssh + X forwarding to Windows

2003-11-27 Thread David E. Fox
> Well, if you are tunneling X, it would be display 0, not 1. You would be much > better off to use TightVNC since it supports compression and also has a Actually I figured part of it out, and was able to start gtkatlantic and xterm and display them here - apparently when I start the putty sess

Re: [newbie] ssh + X forwarding to Windows

2003-11-27 Thread Bryan Phinney
On Thursday 27 November 2003 05:50 pm, David E. Fox wrote: > Hello everyone, happy Thanksgiving > > I was reading up on interesting topics and noticed something that I > wanted to try, which is X tunneling/forwarding over a secure connection > using ssh and putty on Windows. > > I've used Putty

[newbie] ssh + X forwarding to Windows

2003-11-27 Thread David E. Fox
Hello everyone, happy Thanksgiving I was reading up on interesting topics and noticed something that I wanted to try, which is X tunneling/forwarding over a secure connection using ssh and putty on Windows. I've used Putty a number of times with cuccess to run my linux computer remotely. As