You know I was going to mention the SSH aspect but I figured keeping it
simple was the best choice. and sometimes yes you have to be a little crazy
and throw in the -C. madness! ;)
On Mon, Mar 3, 2008 at 12:30 PM, Matthew Rogers <matt@runithard.com> wrote:
> If you use SSH....
>
> LOCAL PORT: TARGET HOST(CAN BE A DIFF MACHINE ON THE NETWORK) : TARGET
> HOST PORT
>
> ssh -L 5555:localhost:5900 whoever@XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX
>
> and then VNC to 127.0.0.01:5555 <http://127.0.0.1:5555/> you can tunnel
> your VNC over ssh @ 256
> bit encryption. That's what I do for RDP(port 3389) and VNC. I don't
> like risking losing my logins and even with RDP 48bit encryption is
> better than plain text but it's still kinda smelly.
>
> If you REALLY want to get crazy throw a -C in there to turn on
> compression and you should see better performance on a tight bandwidth
> connection.
>
>
> FYI: Change Halt at work today.... bored, heh ;-)
>
> --Matthew Rogers
>
>
> Eric Brace wrote:
> >
> > Basically the VNC relationship works in a viewer / server fashion. You
> > install the server piece on a computer that you need to have remote
> > access. You use the viewer on the computer you are going to use to
> > connect to the remote pc. A few considerations, is the XP box behind a
> > firewall? Does the XP box have its firewall on, if so you need to open
> > the appropriate ports for the VNC apps to work. On the Ubuntu box you
> > will need to install the viewer portion and make sure that if any
> > firewalls are up on your side that the appropriate ports are open as
> well.
> >
> > RDP, can be enabled on XP by right clicking on my computer, selecting
> > the remote tab and then checking off the allow users to remotely
> > connect to this computer. Again make sure you punch a hole in any
> > firewall for this port or protocol.
> >
> > Oh and one more thing to mention, if the PC is behind a router/switch,
> > you will need to use port forwarding, I have actually seen smart cable
> > modems too that have a port forwarding service in them also. Basically
> > this tells the router to accept the connection and forward it to the
> > appropriate IP / port on the other side. You basically have an outside
> > interface with a public IP that needs to translate into your private,
> > most likely 192.168.1.XXX:4600 address.
> >
> > Again, in Ubuntu I really like the Term Services / RDP client they
> > built in, it really is smooth. VNC is cool to, but its flakey and can
> > be a security concern, even moreso then RDP, but that's another
> > discussion altogether.
> >
> > Take Care!
> >
> > Eric Brace
> >
> > *From:* slug@nks.net [mailto:slug@nks.net] *On Behalf Of *William
> Coulter
> > *Sent:* Friday, February 29, 2008 9:28 PM
> > *To:* slug@nks.net
> > *Subject:* Re: [SLUG] VNC question
> >
> > I have not been able to get RDP to work for me. I don't know or I
> > can't figure out what I was doing wrong. I could give it a try again
> > but I don't expect much from it by me.
> >
> > By going the VNC option, if I have tightvnc viewer on my PC, then how
> > do I have control over the XP? (This is what I mean as I don't have a
> > clue of what I am doing.)
> >
> > William
> >
> > On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 4:12 PM, Eric Brace <eric.brace@gmail.com
> > <mailto:eric.brace@gmail.com>> wrote:
> >
> > You could use RDP, Ubuntu comes with a really nice TS clone for RDP.
> >
> > If your going to use the VNC option, install the UltraVNC server piece
> > on the XP boxes and then install the tight VNC viewer on Ubuntu.
> >
> > On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 3:52 PM, William Coulter
> > <wrcoulter33@gmail.com <mailto:wrcoulter33@gmail.com>> wrote:
> >
> > Ok, I have been reading from both web sites about ultravnc and
> > tightvnc and I am not sure which one I should use. I don't do this
> > in my daily work so this is strange and different to me. What I am
> > trying to do remote control a family PC at another house. I run
> > ubuntu linux but they all run XP. Both vnc's are cross plat form
> > but why do some people use ultravnc over tightvnc and vice-a-versa?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > William
> >
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