> Why don't you try a fresh centos5 install and a simple 'yum install > freenx' to see if that works for you? If you don't have a spare text > box you can do it under vmware. If that works, then you can compare the > working configuration to the one that doesn't work to pin down the > difference. thanks Les, yes, this seems like the way to go when I have more time to give freenx. I like freenx more that vnc, and feel like I should be close to getting it up. The only other thing I can think of is that the connection may be trying > to restore a broken session or one that doesn't really exist. I used to > see that on older versions of freenx but I've forgotten how to clean up > the session info. I tried nxserver --cleanup, as well as removing the old installation of freenx plus various files in ~ and reinstalling -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20070429/b16a4a44/attachment-0005.html>