TightVNC: Remote X the Secure, Fast & Easy Way
Feb 04, 2003, 11:30 (4 Talkback[s])
(Other stories by Joe Barr)
[ Thanks to Joe
Barr for this link. ]
"The original VNC was created at the Olivetti and Oracle
Research Labs in Cambridge, England. The software allowed a desktop
on one computer to be used by others, usually providing
Windows-users with access to applications running on Unix
machines--a panacea for those cross-platform blues. VNC became so
popular that Olivetti released it as free software licensed under
the GPL. When ATT acquired Olivetti in 1999, the name of the labs
was changed to the ATT Laboratories at Cambridge.
"Constantin Kaplinski, a Russian teaching assistant at Tomsk
Polytechnic Institute in Russia, and his team of TightVNC
developers have enhanced the original VNC in a number of ways to
make it faster, more flexible, and more secure. There are full
versions of TightVNC for both Windows and Unix. If you're using a
Mac, you can try the Java version, but only the viewer (client) is
available in Java. TightVNC is licensed under the GPL, and the
source code is available for download from the Web site.
"I was a little hesitant to try TightVNC--not just because I had
never used VNC, but also because I was pretty sure that the
installation and configuration was going to be a real chore. Not to
worry; that definitely is not the case. If you're running Red Hat
7.x or later, there are RPMS available to make installation a
breeze. All in all, TightVNC was as easy to configure and use as it
was to install, even when I opted for extra privacy by using a
secure tunnel between Susan's machine and mine. Here's how I did
it..."
Complete
Story
Related Stories: