Rob:
Heya. Great description of the problem. :) Double NAT'ing,
though, ouch. That's painful. Do you need to run the 5200 in router
mode? Put another way, does anything else to connect to it besides
the LinkSys? If not, it's overkill and "bridge" mode might work
better.
Anyhow...
Hi,
I'm trying to get vncserver to work with XFree86 on Red Hat Enterprise 3.
I've been following directions from realvnc.com, and I've added the
following to my XF86Config:
Section "Module"
...
Subsection "vnc"
Option "Desktop" "MyDesktop"
Option "IdleTimeout" "600"
I Sit corrected. How about "TightVNC and RealVNC do not offer a way to do
that"? I believe it has been discussed, but the feeling (from memory) seems
to be that it creates problems on the system
-Original Message-
From: Gary Sieker [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 02
No. There is no way to do what you want on Windows. Remote Desktop creates a
new "virtual desktop" much the way that Unix/Linux does. VNC simply displays
the existing desktop remotely (for Microsoft Windows products.) This is
pretty much a FAQ and probably ought to be in the FAQs if it's not. :-)
Joe:
In My Humble Opinion, reconfiguring the X server is not really a subject for
this list. Since you have RHEL, you have a support contract with RedHat. I
suggest you call one of their engineers and get them to help you fix this
problem. That's what Tech Support is for. :-)
John
(Not empl
I am running the REALVNC 4.1 server on my Win2K desktop in the office and
connect to it from my home PC, and some others, all running WinXP. If I
use the 4.1 viewer and scroll down or up using the scroll bar on the right
of a screen, unless I very carefully tap the bar as quickly as I can, the