On 3/3/11 7:48 PM, Dr. Ed Morbius wrote: > > It's not the ports. It's the graphical presentation. Oh, and I've run > NX. I do like the way gnome collapses the icons in the task bar when you have enough of them - and pops up the list so you can see it. It makes it easy to find the terminal session connected to some particular remote host. > I'm really just fine with terminal windows and SSH-forwarded apps if > those are necessary. But why do you need screen, then? > I don't keep enough state running remotely to make it worth my time to > have another level of nested desktop cruft to deal with. Ties up too > much real-estate for no win. As I've noted several times: I've already > got SSH local/remote. I don't think of it as a remote desktop - it's 'my' desktop. It just goes where I go with everything still running. > For NX I'd have to install clients and servers, > and X libraries. For something I really don't want or need in the first > place. That makes it sound complicated. It's really just having what you have on your current desktop running in a freenx session and connecting from a client wherever you are. > While I could see the value for someone /not/ running a native Linux > desktop environment. I'm /not/ trying to change your mind about > anything, maybe just open it up a tad to see my PoV. Having cut/paste access between applications on different OS's is a plus, but the real benefit is always having access to the same desktop that almost never stops. And no need to run something like screen. I do run a separate session in a remote office as well for better connectivity to machines in that location and a few others for special purposes, but I prefer it even for the main way I access a local machine. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos