
^ "Maintain the Windows VNC server again. "Open Letter: Leaving TightVNC, Founding TigerVNC". ^ "Releases - TigerVNC/tigervnc - GitHub". Ī 2010 reviewer found the TigerVNC product "much faster than Vinagre, but not quite as responsive as Remmina". TigerVNC became the default VNC implementation in Fedora shortly after its creation. TigerVNC focuses on performance and on remote display functionality. TigerVNC is fully open-source, with development and discussion done via publicly accessible mailing lists and repositories.Ĭompared to TightVNC, TigerVNC adds encryption for all supported operating systems (not just Linux), but it removes scaling the remote display into the client window, file transfer, and changing options while connected. The past few years however, Cendio AB who use it for their product ThinLinc is the main contributor to the project. Red Hat, Cendio AB, and TurboVNC maintainers started this fork because RealVNC had focused on their enterprise non-open VNC and no TightVNC update had appeared since 2006. There is no server for macOS and the Windows server as of release 1.11.0 is no longer maintained. The client supports Windows, Linux and macOS.
TigerVNC is an open source Virtual Network Computing (VNC) server and client software, started as a fork of TightVNC in 2009. Remote desktop, Remote administration, Distributed computing
Server: Linux Client: MS Windows (32-bit/64-bit) ( NT/ 2000/ XP), POSIX ( Linux/ BSD/ OS X/ UNIX-like OSes), MinGW/ MSYS (MS Windows)