Good day readers, today I would like to start a new way of
blogging. (Might not be new, but hey, its new to me :) A sort of blog/Training-Course for Internet server-client related
software.
This is be best area of my software expertise and I have
found it incredibly fun, interesting, and helpful. I hope I can give you some
of the same feelings after you finish this BTC (blog/training-course)
What is a BTC?
I don’t really know. To be honest I made up the term.
Basically, I have quite a large and interesting subject I would like to cover
and it wont all fit in one post. So I decided I would make a little course out
of it. I don’t want to swamp you with a huge, lengthy, and information filled
post. I want to give you regular class-like reviews with tutorials with
assignments. Believe me this is going to be fun for me, and I hope this will be
fun and maybe even useful for you too.
What will this BTC be about?
This BTC will be about Internet related software and will help you understand everything from Network Protocols to Port Mapping to Dynamic Naming Services to Virtual Network Computing. Don’t worry if you don’t know any of these terms. At the end of this blog topic/training-course, you will have at least a basic knowledge of the Internet, your computer, and only what they can accomplish together.
This BTC will be about Internet related software and will help you understand everything from Network Protocols to Port Mapping to Dynamic Naming Services to Virtual Network Computing. Don’t worry if you don’t know any of these terms. At the end of this blog topic/training-course, you will have at least a basic knowledge of the Internet, your computer, and only what they can accomplish together.
We will start this BTC off with a bang and go with something
that’s real fun.
Not to long a discovered something in the world of
computing, something that I think is the coolest thing since the web browser;
it’s called VNC. The acronym “VNC”
stands for “Virtual Network Computing”. Developed by Cambridge University in
England in the at the turn of the millennium and further developed by AT&T
Research labs (These are the guys who invented the most powerful operating
system in the world; UNIX) VNC allows you to have full control to a remote
computer, right down to the very entering of text from your keyboard or the
click of a mouse. It’s all transmitted to the remote computer via Internet or
local area connection (LAN) at the same time it relays the remote computers
screen.
This technology has endless applications. From browsing the
Internet on the remote computer screen (don’t know why you would want to do
that) to manually turning on a server that has crashed and you can find a remedy
through SSH or the classic terminal remote login which been used for ages. (We
will get to SSH later on) Now you might think: “remote server?” “That’s way too
hard and too tedious to setup.” Or “I
don’t have use for that” or “I don’t have a website or a public fileserver or
anything of the such.” It doesn’t stop there my friend.
How VNC has helped me:
Well I’ll be honest with you. I have something near 6
computers and all of them have to be managed and setup with new software, and
time limits for those that use them, and more administration stuff. Now, before I had to get up and go to those
computer every time I need to change a setting, or install a new software, or
start a server on that machine. Now I can just setup the VNC server on each of
those machines. Each with a unique IP (and a password… or else…) so that I can
just sit back and do all I want right from my favorite desktop. No need to go
running around the house or the office. Right from logging into that computer
to visiting the preferences panel of whatever I want to change.
Now you can too! With this course I will be making a regular
post, each with a new aspect of VNC and a tutorial on how to set it up. Stick
with me and soon enough you will feel the amazing felling of real control right
under your fingertips.
Anyway I hope you enjoy this series of IT training I am
going to put together.
Thank you for reading the introduction to this course.
Hopefully it has whetted your curious appetite and you’re ready for some real
fun. Please subscribe to receive updates on posts, which will include the
review, tutorial, and assignments for this course.
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