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Re: Advice Needed
Tom,
>
> 2) Telnet. It does not work on my home network.
If the machine can telnet to itself then it's probably a firewall blocking
outside access. Telnet is considered insecure therefore some distributions
disable it by default. Or they don't even install it by default.
Incidentally Windows 95/98/NT4/2000 all have a telnet client (so does the
TCP/IP add-on for Windows 3.1). You need NT4 Server or 2000 Server to get a
Windows telnet server.
>
> So unless one of you knows how to attach a simple cheap web cam
> to linux,
Make sure USB device support is running (look in /etc/mtab for a line
starting with "/proc/bus/usb"). Plug in the camera. Start xmovie or gPhoto....
>
> a) Run the camera continuously (or a picture a second or so) on the windows
> machine and watch it from the linux machine on the local network.
> b) Open a DOS window on the Windows machine from the linux machine and run
> programs on the Windows machine.
>
> If possible, just what do I have to install? OK, I will install the camera
> software that comes with it.
> Now what?
Download VNC from either http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/ or
http://www.realvnc.com (latest Win & Linux versions). Read their "getting
started" pages before you install.
WinVNC works on Windows 95 too. But I recall that USB in Win95 was bodgey -
stick with Win98.
WinVNC needs to "accept socket connections" so that you can connect to it
remotely. Although you don't actually need a password in -your- setup I've
found that remote clients seem to prefer one. If you're running Zonealarm or
some other firewall you will also need to let WinVNC act as a server to your
local network.
Prolonged use (ie: weeks) of WinVNC on my own Windows 95 & 98 boxes seems to
cause loss of networking. I'm guessing that there's either a memory leak or
stack overflow somewhere, or a variant of that famous lockup-after-49.7-days
bug. Or perhaps it's time for me to reinstall Windows on those computers.
Again... ;-) Windows 2000 and NT4 don't exhibit this problem.
On the Linux machine, open a console window and type in
vncviewer [name or IP address of Windows machine]
and then enter the password when prompted. After a couple of seconds a new X
window opens with your Windows screen inside it.
Note there is a bit of delay responding to mouse movements and screen
changes. I've found it helpful to set the Windows server screen size to be
less than the Linux client's screen size. Speeds things up and avoids
sideways scrolling to see all of the Windows screen. Turning off uber-fancy
Windows backgrounds and screensavers also helps.
I've sent you a screenshot of a VNC session to my Win98 box, overlaid on one
of my Linux desktops. As you can see, you can run DOS sessions or whatever on
the Windows machine through VNC.
VNC has been ported to run on all sorts of things. See the list at
http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/platforms.html There's also an
interesting list of VNC goodies at
http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/extras.html
cheers,
--
Fraser Farrell
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http://astronomy.trilobytes.com.au
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