Cygwin is a set of GNU compatibility libraries for Win32 - it allows you to compile [some] UN*X programs for Windows (for example, the AbiWord builds for Windows are built with Cygwin) It was developed originally by Cygnus Inc, who were then bought by Red Hat. It's *not* used for what you're suggesting, except that you can build XFree86 using it, which you can then use to make an XDMCP connection to a UN*X box. Doing that will allow you to talk to any boxen that talks XDMCP - Red Hat, SuSE, Solaris, AIX, you name it...
It has been suggested to me that I can install Cygwin on the Windows machines and use this to connect to Linux systems. Isnt Cygwin made by Red Hat? Will it work with SuSE? -- James Ogley, Unix Systems Administrator, Pinnacle Insurance Plc james.ogley@pinnacle.co.uk www.pinnacle.co.uk +44 (0) 20 8731 3619 Using Free Software since 1994, running GNU/Linux (SuSE 8.0) Updated GNOME RPMs for SuSE Linux: www.usr-local-bin.org
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