Hi,
Just a little reminder to help open-source project by donating. Almost every project needs funding and it is easy to donate. My latest donations? Mondorescue, CentOS, PfSense, UltraVNC.
Hi,
Just a little reminder to help open-source project by donating. Almost every project needs funding and it is easy to donate. My latest donations? Mondorescue, CentOS, PfSense, UltraVNC.
Hi,
I’ve been using UltraVNC for a while and while commenting on an article on UnixTutorials, I thought it would be a good idea to share my knowledge. First, I must say that UltraVNC is a free version of VNC that has more features than the free version of RealVNC (thanks for sharing the code, though…). It supports encryption and Active Directory authentication, and a few other nice features.
But what I want to talk about today is the Single-Click feature (SC). Very useful… Example situation: One of your client went to a foreign country and he wants to configure the e-mail client of a laptop he borrowed there. VNC is not installed. You can spend an hour telling him over the phone how to configure Outlook or Thunderbird, or just tell him to go to your website, download a single executable, and take control of the PC and configure it.
How to proceed:
Limitations:
I hope this is all clear. If you have questions, please don’t hesitate to ask them here, I’ll be glad to answer them.
* By the way, if VNC is installed on the remote machine and steps 1 and 2 are done, you can just tell the remote user to right-click on the VNC server icon in the system tray and select “Add new client”. Then they just put your FQDN or IP address (you can use http://whatismyip.org to find it out) in the hostname field, then click ok. You’re directly connected, no prompt.