On Sun, 18 Dec 2005 23:08:26 -0800, Steven Susbauer wrote:
> As stated before, x11vnc is by far the easiest system to set this up
> with. When you have an x session running, you can run x11vnc (that's
> all you need to type) and then connect from anywhere.
You can also make the current KDE deskto
As stated before, x11vnc is by far the easiest system to set this up with. When you have an x session running, you can run x11vnc (that's all you need to type) and then connect from anywhere. You can even run the command over an ssh connection. My favorite way of using this is through putty, just f
http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_TightVNC_connecting_to_current_session
The wiki thing is a useful tool if you search for things on it. It may
not have everything, but it did have what you were lookin for.
Ow Mun Heng wrote:
On Sun, 2005-12-18 at 19:46 -0500, Daniel D Jones wrote:
Is there
On Sun, 2005-12-18 at 19:46 -0500, Daniel D Jones wrote:
> Is there a utility that will allow you to take control of the current Linux
> desktop from a remote machine? This is the way VNC works in windows. Open
> VNC on a remote machine and you see the exact same thing you see on the local
> m
On 12/18/05, Daniel D Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I need. Are there, perhaps, any VNC app which offers this feature under
> Linux?
x11-misc/x11vnc should do what you want.
-Richard
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Is there a utility that will allow you to take control of the current Linux
desktop from a remote machine? This is the way VNC works in windows. Open
VNC on a remote machine and you see the exact same thing you see on the local
monitor, including any running programs. Under Linux, however, VN
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