Hi Tyler,
On Sa 19 Mär 2011 19:43:55 CET Tyler Jameson Little wrote:
I was thinking of hosting my modifications of the code on GitHub. I am in
the United States of America, so we obviously don't have the same laws as
Germany does. Should I not post my code on GitHub? I would really like to
s
On Sat, Mar 19, 2011 at 19:43:55 (CET), Tyler Jameson Little wrote:
> Yes, thank you. I was trying to access the code under the projects/
> directory, but obviously that didn't work.
>
> Which repositories are necessary for getting a simple server up and
> running? I don't need anything like soun
Thanks everyone for your input. Here in my idea outlined in steps:
1. Rewrite the interface with SSH to instead forward the compressed
traffic over HTTP to the browser
1. Create a module for NodeJS
2. Create a websocket with a browser that supports websockets
3. Transmit
Hi Tyler,
welcome on our List!
Am 19.03.2011 07:35, schrieb Tyler Jameson Little:
> Mike informed me that the x2go team is already developing browser plugins,
> but I wanted a way to integrate a remote session into a browser using pure
> HTML5 and JavaScript.
His sounds very intersting!
> Ha
On Sat, Mar 19, 2011 at 07:35:04 (CET), Tyler Jameson Little wrote:
> Has the x2go team significantly modified the base NX server code? If so,
> where can I get the full source code for the server (not just the
> scripts)?
depends what you mean with 'base NX server code'. x2go is using a
largely
Hi Tyler,
On Sa 19 Mär 2011 07:35:04 CET Tyler Jameson Little wrote:
Has the x2go team significantly modified the base NX server code? If so,
where can I get the full source code for the server (not just the scripts)?
Mike led me to this website: http://i4git.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/, but
I am developing a way to pipe NX over HTTP (client and NodeJS server
module), and I noticed that x2go is a full-featured solution based on NX
technology. I already asked about this on the users mailing list and I was
directed here by Mike Gabriel. I'll try to not repeat anything that was
already