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On Wed, 16 Feb 2005 07:40:09 -0500, xpyttl wrote:
"Leland C. Scott" wrote in message ... I can see no advantage to running an exported xsession from a *nix machine to a windows desktop. Except when that is all you have access to use. I have a company laptop, Well, there is a lot more than that. Most of us interact from time to time with other people, and it's a Windoze/Office world out there. Sorry, that's the way it is. You can wish all you want, and you can prattle on about how much better open source stuff is, but the real world is Windoze/Office. Most of us don't have the luxury of hiding in our hole and pretending that the outside world doesn't exist. Even if we can afford/control another box, most of us also have physical space limitations. I only have room for just so many keyboards on my desk, and it is a major pain in the butt to have to walk around to another desk to get to the Linux console. (Yeah, I probably have more space than most). I run X sessions from Cygwin on a couple of Windoze machines, and it works quite well. Earlier in the thread there was a mention about windows behaving weird under Windows, but I haven't seen that. Indeed, if the X implementation is anywhere close to correct, you shouldn't see that. But it is a huge convenience to have both the Linux *and* Windoze tools at my fingertips. We have a mix of Linux, Windows, Solaris, etc machines at my home and office. When it comes to outstanding convenience and price ( free! ) nothing beats VNC. Much, much faster than X, multi-platform, and you can even issue a 3-finger-salute to a remote Windows box, when necessary. Heck, I've controlled both Windows and Unix boxes with it from my Palm, when I was too lazy to walk to over to my laptop. ;-) Particularly when you run the Xvnc server on a Linux box, the interface is all-but-indistinguishable from running X locally, no matter what machine you're actually sitting at. - Rich |
#12
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"Here to there" wrote in message
. .. We have a mix of Linux, Windows, Solaris, etc machines at my home and office. When it comes to outstanding convenience and price ( free! ) nothing beats VNC. Given your criteria, I'd have to agree with you. HOWEVER... I've used VNC plenty, and there are numerous minor 'quirks' where parts of the screen don't get updated correctly. For connecting Windows machines to other Windows machines, the Microsoft 'Remote Desktop' facility is, in my experience, more reliable and robust (it lets you control far more of what gets 'stripped away' from the controlled machine, besides just the desktop wallpaper that VNC will). (The server side is included with Windows XP for the price of the OS, and the client is free for all platforms, including UNIX machines.) VNC does have some nice goodies that remote desktop doesn't -- the built-in 'web server' feature is really great. I've run some Windows machines with both VNC and remote desktop enabled. ---Joel Kolstad |
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