Running 11.10 patched up to date. When one particular user is logged on to the "target" computer and I try and connect remotely to the desktop from another computer, I get the message that the server has closed the connection.
I gave my brother my public IP address (79.xxx.xx.xx) and he want's to connect to me via remote desktop. How would he do so? How would I set up my computer to allow it?
I can't connect to his via his PublicIP either. Help quickly?
Remote Desktop Login : A well known concept in the web scenario. Infact most of the tech world depends on this. Remote Desktop simply means that you can control the other fellows system from your desktop (with his permission!). All we need is information such as its IP address and the password of the remote machine.
i created a Samsung account out of curiosity about some of the features offered. One of them is remote control services where you can track your S3 from any browser, or lock your phone remotely.
The following howto is due to Andre Honsberg. It was taken from his website: www/andrehonsberg.com.
I just did my first Fedora 12 installation.
Under older versions, e.g. Fedora 11, There is a menu item under Gnome for System> Preferences> Windows which allows for several adjustments, in particular "Window Selection." I prefer to set this to "Select windows when the mouse moves over them."
Is there a description of the features and differences between the Desktop and Default kernels?
Did "Desktop" arrive with 11.2 and 2.6.31 ?
I did not notice it at first. I loaded 11.2 on a desktop machine and both default and desktop kernels were loaded to system, with Desktop set as default in grub.
I was hoping to be able to access a Fedora 17 desktop on EC2. I launched an Amazon EC2 Fedora 17 instance, I logged in via ssh.
I ran: (I figured this would get me a desktop?
I just logged in to my remote shell account like I always do: as an ordinary user, because root login is disabled in sshd. Then I may want to become root with the 'su -' command.
But the 'su -' command did not work today. Every time I tried, I got this laconic message: "Sorry."