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  2. TightVNC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TightVNC

    TightVNC is a free and open-source remote desktop software server and client application for Linux and Windows.A server for macOS is available under a commercial source code license only, without SDK or binary version provided. [3]

  3. VNC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VNC

    Alternatively, a machine (which may be a workstation or a network server) with screen, keyboard, and mouse can be set up to boot and run the VNC server as a service or daemon, then the screen, keyboard, and mouse can be removed and the machine stored in an out-of-the way location. Users commonly deploy VNC as a cross-platform remote desktop system.

  4. RealVNC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RealVNC

    RealVNC is a company that provides remote access software. Their VNC Connect software consists of a server (VNC Server) and client (VNC Viewer) application, which exchange data over the RFB protocol to allow the Viewer to control the Server's screen remotely.

  5. Comparison of remote desktop software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_remote...

    It offers an advantage when you can't reconfigure the router/firewall (for example in case it is on the Internet service provider's side), but is a serious security risk (unless the traffic is end-to-end encrypted), because all the traffic will pass through some proxy server which in most cases is owned by the remote access application's ...

  6. x11vnc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X11vnc

    x11vnc is a Virtual Network Computing (VNC) server program. It allows remote access from a remote client to a computer hosting an X Window session and the x11vnc software, continuously polling [4] the X server's frame buffer for changes.

  7. TigerVNC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TigerVNC

    TigerVNC is an open source Virtual Network Computing (VNC) server and client software, started as a fork of TightVNC in 2009. [2] The client supports Windows, Linux and macOS. The server supports Linux. There is no server for macOS [3] and as of release 1.11.0 the Windows server is no longer maintained. [4]

  8. RFB (protocol) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFB_(protocol)

    The VNC protocol expresses mouse button state in a single byte, as binary up/down. This limits the number of mouse buttons to eight (effectively 7 given convention of button 0 meaning "disabled"). Many modern mice enumerate 9 or more buttons, leading to forward/back buttons having no effect over RFB. A "GII" extension solves this problem.

  9. Vino (VNC server) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vino_(VNC_server)

    Vino was a VNC server for the GNOME desktop environment, the GNOME developers now recommend using "gnome-remote-desktop" instead. Configuration up to version 3.8.0 was via the vino-preferences program. This was removed from the packages after that version, since the gnome-control-center could then be used alternatively to control settings.