Todd,
I just saw an article in Linux Magazine about a client called UniTTY, it's a client for SSH, SFTP, VNC, secure VNC, rlogin and telnet. It's free, but not open source and written in Java.
I've never used it, but it's there: www.3sp.com/products/applicatons/unitty/unitty.jsp.
Matthew
On Wed, 2007-01-31 at 11:14 -0800, Todd Cary wrote:
Bart -
When I am the road, I would like to be able to access the server. I can do it with putty or another SSH client I have (Windoz) How can I access VNC with those clients?
Todd
Bart Schaefer wrote:
On 1/31/07, Johnny Hughes mailing-lists@hughesjr.com wrote:
However, tcp ports 5900/5901 inbound do need to be open if you want to connect to VNC.
You need to NOT open those to everyone and only to trusted source machines as VNC does not encrypt login info by default
VNC doesn't encrypt anything by default.
I recommend leaving the ports closed and always connecting to VNC through an ssh tunnel. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos