I use quite often, both on windows and unix platforms. enables me to remotely manage windows computers. check out www.workspot.com, sign up for a free linux desktop through your webbrowser via vnc On Wed, 21 Jun 2000, you wrote:
It looks interesting, just wondering if anyone is playing with it and Linux (RH, SuSE, Turbo) already. Someone in one of the sites I look after "wants to use it" according to his mail's initial message, I don't think it will provide what he really wants as results, but for once he has supplied a lead to a package I am interested in using, as long as it isn't going to cause trouble on what is a 98% stable configuration.
From their webpage I quote
"VNC stands for Virtual Network Computing. It is, in essence, a remote display system which allows you to view a computing 'desktop' environment not only on the machine where it is running, but from anywhere on the Internet and from a wide variety of machine architectures. "
and
"No state is stored at the viewer. This means you can leave your desk, go to another machine, whether next door or several hundred miles away, reconnect to your desktop from there and finish the sentence you were typing. Even the cursor will be in the same place. With a PC X server, if your PC crashes or is restarted, all the remote applications will die. With VNC they go on running. It is small and simple. The Win32 viewer, for example, is about 150K in size and can be run directly from a floppy. There is no installation needed. It is truly platform-independent. A desktop running on a Linux machine may be displayed on a PC. Or a Solaris machine. Or any number of other architectures. The simplicity of the protocol makes it easy to port to new platforms. We have a Java viewer, which will run in any Java-capable browser. We have a Windows NT server, allowing you to view the desktop of a remote NT machine on any of these platforms using exactly the same viewer. (The NT server is not multi-user - see the documentation). And other people have ported VNC to a wide variety of other platforms. It is sharable. One desktop can be displayed and used by several viewers at once, allowing CSCW-style applications. It is free! You can download it, use it, and redistribute it under the terms of the GNU Public Licence. Both binaries and source code are available from the download page, along with a complete copy of this documentation. "
url is "http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/index.html" for those who want to follow.
No, this is not an add for them, I just wanted to provide some basic data for comparison for those who don't want to link.
regards scsijon
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