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semantics! he wants to share a desktop to multiple users for training. at that point, the desktop hosting the training session becomes a server, semantically speaking. the others who will be watching the session are the clients. regardless, of which platform the training is run from, vnc will still provide the needed functionality. he had asked for a solution that doesn't require a sever to host the meeting. i would assume that meant a separate server. also, even though we speak of using a pc (windows or unix/linux) as a desktop, it still is a server. the desktop manager accepts drawing request from different processes/programs and draws them. wait a minute, that sounds like X. vnc just moves the drawing part to whichever clients are connected. if you ping us, do we not bind! (apologies to will shakespeare) ;>)) Matthew Gillen <me at mattgillen.ne To: jboland at citistreetonline.com t> cc: Discuss at blu.org Subject: Re: Linux alternative to MS Netmeeting 01/09/2007 09:31 AM jboland at citistreetonline.com wrote: > what about vnc? Well, he asked about something that wouldn't require a server to "host" the meeting, but it's not clear why that's undesirable, or what exactly he means by that. Without any more clarification on those two points, strictly speaking VNC /does/ require a persistent "server" session, so it is presumably unsuitable for him. > In the company I work for, quite a few people use Netmeeting to share > desktops during training. Anyone know of a way to either connect to > their Netmeeting, or an alternative that will work on both Windows & > Linux, and not require a server to host the meeting. Matt -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.
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