

Who is Using X11's LBX and RX Features? 14
tjansen asks: "In 1998 Open Group released
X11R6.4, which introduced two nifty features called LBX (Low Bandwidth X) and RX (Remote Execution). LBX reduced the bandwidth needed by the X protocol, and RX made it possible to embed a remote X11 application securely into a Netscape plugin. Since version 4.0 both are also included in XFree86. Together they look like a nice and platform-independent solution for Application Service Providers (there are Windows clients, of course) and I wonder why I have never seen anybody using this."
I would use RX if I could (Score:2)
Re:Why Not LBX? (Score:1)
group: Application Service Providers that offer
applications to users using LBX/RX. I am interested whether the performance of LBX is high enough that RX could be used to replace Java applets or regular ActiveX stuff that cause trouble and inconvenience for many people.
Re:SSH Does Compression (Score:2)
Re:SSH Does Compression (Score:1)
I think you're confusing the X Consortium and X/Open...
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the telephone rings / problem between screen and chair / thoughts of homocide
Re:SSH Does Compression (Score:2)
It's now three years later, XFree86 4.x is looking completely stable, along with LBX, RX, and a slew of other things that nobody ever uses. It is uncertain to me whether or not it will ever make a difference, at this point. At the time of LBX's birthing (early 1998), bandwidth was nearly nonexistant for everyone, and such a thing made sense for a great number of people.
That said, I'd like to use LBX. I want to run [gnutella|napster|mojonation|freenet] on a high-bandwidth linux box with a DDS-2 drive, while sitting at home behind a trio of 28.8 modems (ie, "As Good As It Gets In Rural Ohio"). Never underestimate the bandwidth of a Chevy Beretta filled to the brim with DAT carts.
I've used differential X (dxpc [vigor.nu]) with some success, but it uses particularly ugly methods of interfacing with the client software, and requires being set up before each session. I've also used ssh's gzip compression and X11 forwarding, which isn't anywhere near as fast, but is at least transparent in use.
LBX and RX/Broadway would seem to serve both purposes admirably. Too bad that in this chicken/egg scenario, the bird just won't lay any eggs.
SSH Does Compression (Score:2)
RX sounds interesting, where can we get more info?
Thanks.
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Adam Sherman
Re:SSH Does Compression (Score:1)
There is and it is (Score:1)
Re:SSH Does Compression (Score:1)
It doesn't appear that the site has been updated since 1997, though. All the pages seem to be copyright 1997.
Re:SSH Does Compression (Score:2)
Under any other name, it's still not used at all...
Hummingbird, IIRC, used to run a broadway.com (or was it .org?) web site, but both of those are run by, you guessed it, Broadway (you know, like NY Theatre) organizations now.
I don't know why Broadway wasn't more popular. It's really a mystery to me. It's sad, but I think it has to mean that there just weren't any compelling X applications that could beat out the native Windows or Java apps on the Web desktop.
Re:SSH Does Compression (Score:2)
I worked for a company that was investigating Broadway back when it first came out for our X application, but interest in Broadway just fizzled.
My guess is that at that time everybody wanted Java apps or native apps.
Really, RX/LBX were never very impressive over slow links, so you either had X and enough bandwidth to support the app, or you didn't and then you didn't want RX/LBX anyway. There's your chicken/egg scenario.
Why Not LBX? (Score:3)
The number of users of X is a small proportion of the internet as a whole.
Those that do use X fall into 2 categories
Meanwhile, in the second case, I am BW limited, but using LBX does not address my problems running a Linux box at home. I run a browswer and all X clients locally and display locally. Maybe once I ran exmh on the ISP's machine just to see what it was like having direct disk access to my mail, but it generally didn't seem worth the hassle. Any graphics attachments still had to be rendered over a slow pipe.
If they had put LBX into the low level infrastructure from the beginning, so that all X protocol would use it transparently, then it would have been great. Otherwise, IMHO, it's just a great idea still looking for problem to solve.
Re:Why Not LBX? (Score:2)
Re:Could we make it ANY more complicated? (Score:1)