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Full Discussion: Newbie: X-Windows Question
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Newbie: X-Windows Question Post 302162731 by micstone on Tuesday 29th of January 2008 10:20:47 PM
Old 01-29-2008
Newbie: X-Windows Question

I just got a Sunblade running Solaris 9. I am wanting to be able to connect to it from Windows XP Pro and use X-windows. Can someone point me in the right direction on what I need to do? I have tried using several programs I have found on the web to to the XServer stuff but when I log in to the sunblade remotely and type startx at the command prompt i get that it is an unrecognized command. Is there a specific shell I need to use, is there something special I need to do on the UNIX box? Please help.

Thanks!
 

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ppmtobmp(1)						      General Commands Manual						       ppmtobmp(1)

NAME
ppmtobmp - convert a portable pixmap into a BMP file SYNOPSIS
ppmtobmp [-windows] [-os2] [-bpp=bits_per_pixel] [ppmfile] DESCRIPTION
Reads a portable pixmap as input. Produces a Microsoft Windows or OS/2 BMP file as output. OPTIONS
All options can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix and you can use a double dash in place of the single dash, GNU-style. -windows Tells the program to produce a Microsoft Windows BMP file. (This is the default.) -os2 Tells the program to produce an OS/2 BMP file. (Before August 2000, this was the default). -bpp This determines how many bits per pixel you want the BMP file to contain. Only 1, 4, 8, and 24 are possible. By default, ppmtobmp chooses the smallest number with which it can represent all the colors in the input image. If you specify a number too small to represent all the colors in the input image, ppmtobmp tells you and terminates. You can use ppmquant or ppmdither to reduce the number of colors in the image. NOTES
To get a faithful reproduction of the input image, the maxval of the input image must be 255. If it is something else, ppmtobmp the colors in the BMP file may be slightly different from the colors in the input. Windows icons are not BMP files. Use ppmtowinicon to create those. SEE ALSO
bmptoppm(1), ppmtowinicon(1), ppmquant(1), ppmdither(1), ppm(5) AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1992 by David W. Sanderson. 13 June 2000 ppmtobmp(1)
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