This was originally a short page with some VNC related tools I have worked on, many in "beta" stages. I have recently begun including some tools developed by other VNC users which don't have a home of their own.
The latest addition is actually entirely the work of Nathan Hartley with an addition by Branimir Petrovic; it is a set of scripts designed for secure remote support. They can be used to set up and start the VNC service on the fly, then shut it down and remove all traces from the registry, so that on-demand support can be easily accomplished. I haven't put together any documentation on the tools yet, but they are available for download.
One interesting adaptation of this tool would be to create a package that can automatically connect to a listening viewer, allowing easy support for systems on a private network.
An Excel spreadsheet containing default registry keys created by WinVNC when installed as a service on NT without the service helper.
A WSH script which automatically generates a report on local VNC server config, local machine settings, and local default user data. If global per-user settings are set up for the current user it will show those as well.
Audits a subnet you define for Windows systems running Windows VNC servers; checks their registry settings and summarized for you. A WSH-based tool which uses IE for display. NOTE - systems being scanned must have WMI installed and running.
Checks local VNC configuration and displays the settings for you.
An ADM file for centralized configuration of VNC hosts on a Windows LAN. This is a tool I did not write; it was put together by Daniel Quinlan. This is great for LANs with pre-XP clients where you want easy remote support abilities.
A script-based port scanner built around Monte Hansen's kvbWinsockLib. It is intended as one part of a solution for gathering information about VNC installs.