Patrick Fleming EA wrote: > > > try VNC... that will basically replace the KVM. About 4 years ago I > > had VNC running on my home LAN between Solaris, Linus, and WinNT. > > Unless the bios won't allow you to over ride the keyboard and mouse > halt errors. Then you either have to plug in an extra keyboard and mouse, > or boot on the KVM switch. I have gone back and forth between using VNC > and KVM depending upon what I need. The Windows VNC server doesn't render > all that well. true. But in that case you have to have to either have a real KM attached, have the KVM point to that machine while booting, or hack pig tale so that it "looks like" there is a keyboard. What I did in this situation in the past was to put the old machine (a 486 DX66) in a back corner with an ol cheep keyboard and mouse and no monitor. Then I used VNC from my nicer/newer machine to access the older one when needed. The issue for me was desk realestate no the fact that the old machine underneath a back corner of the desk had a keyboard sitting on top of it... Well, it worked for me. EBo --