Specifically in the Sharing preferences.  That is also where you can
turn on FTP, web, SMB, printer sharing, appletalk etc...
SSH is cleverly concealed behind the "Remote Login" toggle.
It's also where you can start/stop the firewall.  You should make sure
you either open the port for X or stop the firewall for a remote X
session to work without using SSH.  With SSH, it shouldn't matter.

sim

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Austad, Jay [mailto:JAustad at temgweb.com] 
> Sent: Thursday, April 24, 2003 12:01 PM
> To: 'tclug-list at mn-linux.org'
> Subject: RE: [TCLUG] X11 and MacOS X...
> 
> 
> SSH is not enabled by default, but you can turn it on 
> somewhere in the sys
> prefs.  Like Jay Kline said, you can pipe the X11 session 
> over SSH, when you
> do this though, make sure you pass ssh the -C option.  This turns on
> compression and makes the session much more responsive, 
> unless your box is
> abysmally slow.
> 
> Jay

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