What is the Fastest VNC Software On Windows 8 ? - Windows 8 General

I Want To Know What Is The Fastest VNC Software To Windows 8?

Is there some reason you expect the answer to be any different on Win8 than on any prior version? I don't know of anything that should affect performance of VNC, either server or client, that is new to Win8. For that matter, are you asking about server or client performance?

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Access Your Home Computer From Your PDA.

hi there......
was just surfing the net and found out this software www.logmein.com all you need to do is register over here and download a software on the pc you wanna access and just install it.....after the installation is complete u can either access your computer from a pda from ne where or you can access it from ne other computer......
Conditions Apply :
the computer you wanna access shud be turned on and logmein software shud be running.
the computer you wanna access shud be connected to the internet.
this is how you can connect to your computer from your pda.
is this safe?
I used to use https://www.gotomypc.com/ a couple of years ago with my original XDA when I was away from the office. It did the job, but it's a bit tedius on a small screen. If you logged in from another PC it was great and I used it daily.
safe as eva it can get becaz u cannot do ne **** if u dun haf the admin username and password for tht windows machine(homepc)
You just have to trust the software.
I don't know these companies, and I'm sure they are all legit. But a bad one could simply send the ip-address, userid and password to a logging machine.
I wonder how do these programs compare to the latest version of PC Anywhere? I think PCAnywhere has a client for the Pocket PC and the plus is that you don't need to pay monthly subscription and that your data is totally safe as it's being tunneled directly to you bypassing any server. Plus Norton seem to have more resources than small companies. I also wonder how does this compare to Terminal Server Client.. Anyone?
yeah i did hear bout pcanywhere neva used it......but i heard tht its good n very stable software.....dunno whether its for free or u need to purchase it n stuff....n as far as pcanywhere hafin a client for ppc tht must be something good n worth looookin at !!
Remote Control
pcAnywhere is not free, but it does work well. You should look at VNC or RealVNC. It's free, and there is a client included in the SE ROM. There is some tweaking necessary for your firewall (if you're running one). I think the ports are tcp/udp on 5800 and 5900, but you should check the included documentation. Both client and server software can be found here: http://realvnc.com/
Terminal services is probably the best over narrow bandwidths like GPRS since it only sends the windows drawing commands to redraw the screen but you need either XP Pro or Windows server to run the server version of the program. I use VNC because I only have Win2k on my laptop - it's slow with screen updates.
VNC for 2003SE/Intel PXA: WHERE to download it??
Regarding VNC client for Qtek 9090, I miss something
(maybe because it is friday and I am getting tired) :? .
Where is it possible to find a VNC client for Qtek 9090?
If I understand well, to run it on a Qtek it has to be:
- either a Win Mobile 2003SE for Intel PXA program, or
- a Java program
Is that true?
And if it is, where can I find one, I don't find anything similar
on the http://www.realvnc.com/download.html .
Thanks,
Anton
any windows CE program will run
on xda's
there are many versions well 3 that i've seen of vnc clients for
windows ce / pda's with pocketpc now windows mobile on them
I did a google search, here's a link:
http://www.pocketpccity.com/software/pocketpc/VNC-Viewer-for-PocketPC-2001-1-2-ce-pocketpc.html
If you are running a v4 VNC server make sure it's in v3 compatibility mode since there is only a v3 PPC client available
Mark, thanks for pointing me to a link with a VNC client!
>any windows CE program will run
>on XDA's
Rudegar, regarding the HW platform, I still think that you have to
have a version compiled for your HW.
:!: However, in the meantime I found the answer at Intel's page
ftp://download.intel.com/design/pca/prodbref/251671-002.pdf
-->
Qtek 9090s (XDAs, and similar) have the PXA263 processor that is based
on Intel XScale technology, and these have the ARM* v.5TE ISA
compliant instruction set.
So a program for ARM will be the right one.
Anton

Linux solution for Push Email

Hi peeps,
do you guys know if there is a linux solution to get push email working without exchange. I'm thinking of getting exchange 2003 sp2 running in vmware, but it would be much easier to have a native solution. Anyone?
<edit> made correction pointed out below
I've never heard of exchange 2005. I think you mean exchange 2003 SP2
I dont think there is a linux solution for email push because this is a special microsoft feature in WM5.
But exchange 2003 in VMWare sounds good. Take the new VMWare Server for this, its free
Yeah running in VMWare will all be possible. But i have to purchase more memory for it. (its just a poor 733 running basically running all server functions for me) So a native solution would be more convinient. Thx for your answer. -
<edit> http://www.funambol.com might be a solution, but i didn't look into this yet.
Yeah I also was planning to install Vmware on my Redhat Fedora Core 4 server and install Exchange 2003 on it.
My server is a P3 running at 866Mhz with 512MB Ram....so it would be definitely to slow to run a Virtual Exchange 2003 machine on it.
Also because I run Veritas Netbackup 5.1 on it, which is pretty heavy to run.
I'm gonna install Vmware on my laptop (Centrino 1.7Ghz with 512MB) this weekend and lets see if Exchange would run on this machine.
But I really would love to see a sync solution on Linux that could just sync my mailaccount.
I know about some tools that can maybe do this but didn't have a good look into their capabilities:
- Exchange4Linux
- Funambol
- Sync4j
There is pushmail email service if you use an Oracle solution called collaboration suite. Runs natively on Redhat.
ricadelic said:
Hi peeps,
do you guys know if there is a linux solution to get push email working without exchange. I'm thinking of getting exchange 2003 sp2 running in vmware, but it would be much easier to have a native solution. Anyone?
<edit> made correction pointed out below
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There is pushmail email service if you use an Oracle solution called collaboration suite. Runs natively on Redhat.
ricadelic said:
Hi peeps,
do you guys know if there is a linux solution to get push email working without exchange. I'm thinking of getting exchange 2003 sp2 running in vmware, but it would be much easier to have a native solution. Anyone?
<edit> made correction pointed out below
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@molski: Sync4j is the old version, the new name of this project is funambol, so forget sync4j

Accessing Apple Remote Desktop (3.1) from a Windows Mobile device (Pocket PC)

Has anyone been able to properly communicate with Apple Remote Desktop (3.1) from a Windows Mobile device (Pocket PC)?
I can succesfully communicate with Apple Remote Desktop from my Windows XP desktop PC through the Real VNC client (be it with full resolution hence slow), but none of the Windows Mobile versions (Mocha, Real VNC, vnc viewer etc.) seem to allow connection (even though Apple advertises them) on my Athena running WM6 (original HTC Europe rom)...
I have no problem accessing the Mac through ftp from my mobile device and Real VNC on my Windows Mobile device allows me to perfectly control Windows PCs.
Any suggestions/help?
Or should I switch to VNC on all platforms?
Thanks in advance for your views.
You have to explicitly state on your Mac that VNC applications can access it in your sharing preferences.
I ticked that option, entered a password.
I can access the Mac from WinXP, where I use Real VNC (full color only way to access hence slow), but I can`t seem to do that from WM...
What software are you using on WM to access your Mac?
puTTY. I don't dare try to use a 400MHz device with 64MB of memory and a 320x240 screen to access a 1680x1050 screen. If you are familiar with Terminal, using SSH is a much better way to access your Mac.
In VGA mode it is not super, but I want just to be able to (quickly) do some checking...
I am not really familiar with terminal and SSH on the Mac unfortunately.
If you have any (links to) information or suggestions on settings, software etc., that would be extremely nice.
Thanks for your help so far!!
kind regards,
bins

ActiveX on IE?

Thinking about [icking up the HD2 on Tmobile USA.
Does IE have activex in it? I would use it to remotely log on to my 2003 server.
Does it work on slingbox.com?
No, simply no.
ActiveXs are simply x86 windows applications... no way it would run on our ARM based mobiles.

Remote Desktop software

hi all, forgive my ignorance but I would like to use my hd 2 to remotely access my home computer while out. I see the hd2 comes with remote desktop software but from what I can tell it can only be used to control computers on a lan, i.e. I'd need to be in the same domain anyway. is this correct?
z2 remote to pc is a decent piece of software ive used in the past, how well does it work on the hd2? would this new the nearest software to my needs?
tia!
its like the desktop version. it can work over the internet aswell.
Thanks - from what I've read it also supports pinch-to-zoom which is fantastic.
The only thing that concerns me is just how secure Remote Desktop is on the client side (WinXP). I guess a lot of it is down to the user to secure things, I found a decent guide here on how to minimise brute force attacks.
What appealed to me about z2 remote pc from a security point of view is that it required its own usernames/passwords to be set up as opposed to using actual Windows users and supported up to 256bit AES encryption, good stuff!
I figure I'll try both again and see how they perform.
SMS92 said:
Thanks - from what I've read it also supports pinch-to-zoom which is fantastic.
The only thing that concerns me is just how secure Remote Desktop is on the client side (WinXP). I guess a lot of it is down to the user to secure things, I found a decent guide here on how to minimise brute force attacks.
What appealed to me about z2 remote pc from a security point of view is that it required its own usernames/passwords to be set up as opposed to using actual Windows users and supported up to 256bit AES encryption, good stuff!
I figure I'll try both again and see how they perform.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Remote desktop from Microsoft is extremely safe to use...
For one, it uses 128-bit encryption (RC4), you login using the same login mechanisms as the windows machine... and no user with blank password or not-admin can login, so you don't suffer from that, either...
Hi guys,
You can use Logmein Hamachi Network to extend access for computers.
Go to Logmein, create an account and create a network with Hamachi.
Install Hamachi on computer do you want to connect remote, like home and work computers.
Hamachi is a VPN Network software you can use Remote Desktop Mobile to access yours computers in Hamachi Network.
There is a client for logmein Hamachi that works on HD2. Join to your Hamachi Network and use a IP Address of your computer on RDP Mobile.
The solution with Logmein Hamachi is excelent. Remote Desktop Mobile make a great job and Logmein Hamachi can connect 16 computer anywhere for free.
Try and let me know your opinion.

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