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Originally Posted by luka
Can't believe nobody mentioned VNC. I have been using it for about 15 years so far. It is direct PC-to-PC connection and does not require Internet. Free and open source. Several compatible variants exist, see UltraVNC or TightVNC for example.
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Suggested in posts 7 and 8.
Quote:
If I am not mistaken remote desktop will not allow you to use the local screen in the observatory until you close your remote session which will shut down all the running software (I am not sure if you need to use the screen in the observatory but my guess would be yes).
VNC simply exports the running screen so in your office you would have exactly the same screen as in the observatory.
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When a Remote Desktop client takes hold of the session, it does not
shut down all the running software.
On the server machine the login screen appears but on the remote client
you see the desktop as it was with all applications running. If you
then login to the desktop of the target machine, it terminates the client's
connection but again all applications continue to run.
Microsoft also provide a free Remote Desktop client for Mac OS X which
is updated regularly.
Remote Desktop tends to be faster than VNC because of the difference
in how they communicate changes to the screen. However, since VNC
uses a low-level bitmap approach, it is more readily ported and
will run across a range of different platforms such as Linux. Windows,
Android and Mac OS X and Apple iOS.
Teamviewer also supports Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, Android, and Apple iOS.