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01/20/2009 Relevance: 12.56Windows will never exert itself in the slightest to co-exist with other platforms, but Linux comes with a variety of excellent secure graphical remote desktop applications, so that you can run your Windows PC from Linux, and Linux from Windows. Come on in and let Eric Geier show you how.Search further
01/27/2009 Relevance: 11.48In Part I Eric Geier showed us several options for remoting between Linux and Windows machines, and settled on VNC. Today we'll learn how to configure routers for connections over the Internet,and how to safely encrypt our remote graphical desktop sessions.Search further
02/14/2008 Relevance: 11.46This guide explains how you can enable a remote desktop on an Ubuntu desktop so that you can access and control it remotely. This makes sense for example if you have customers that are not very tech-savvy. If they have a problem, you can log in to their desktops without the need to drive to their location. I will also show how to access the remote Ubuntu desktop from a Windows XP client and an Ubuntu client.Search further
04/14/2007 Relevance: 11.12WinaXe Plus X-Server for Windows allows both Windows and Linux to be run on the same desktop at the same time. Users can access and run their remote applications from the Windows desktop and switch between operating systems as if switching between two Windows applications.Search further
02/26/2010 Relevance: 10.85cently I wrote an article, How do I connect to a remote Windows 7 desktop from a Linux machine, and was asked to show how to do the same trick - the other way around. You might assume this trick to be a challenge. You will be surprised how little of a challenge it really is. But first off - you might be asking yourselfâWhy would I need this?â The answer is to use a single point of administration. How many times have you be scurrying around computers to try to resolve a problem only to have to waste time going back and forth. With the previous article you were given the means to connect from Linux to Windows.Now, with the ability to connect from Windows to Linux, you have all you need to make administrating from a central location much easier. And with that said, letâs get on with the setup.Search further
03/23/2007 Relevance: 10.66If you have ever tried to access a Windows box remotely, it is very likely you suffered a lot of frustration. Remote desktop works great but only when you have a stable broadband connection to your remote machine. In GNU/Linux you (as usual) have a choice you can connect remotely, both graphically and text-based (for maximum performance) using at least a few methods described in the article.Search further
04/16/2008 Relevance: 9.90Desktop on Demand (DOD) is the latest contender to give users a full-fledged remote desktop instead of Web-based applications to help users to stay productive when they are on the move. Similar to Ulteo (which we reviewed not long ago), DOD gives you a full-blown remote Linux-based desktop -- but that's where the similarity ends. Unlike Ulteo, which is based on the VNC protocol and runs entirely in the browser using a Java-based applet, DOD employs the NoMachine NX technology for accessing the remote desktop.Search further
03/12/2009 Relevance: 9.66Linux is cram-full of all kinds of remote administration utilities, and even the oldtimers such as gdm and kdm are still good and useful. Juliet Kemp shows us how to use kdm and gmd to enable remote graphical desktops on KDE and GNome.Search further
11/24/2006 Relevance: 9.05Work had some old desktop PCs going spare and I set one up for my father. Mostly because I didn't want to have to remote admin a Windows machine I decided to install Debian on it. While Debian is viewed as a mostly server-specific distro, I believe that that it can be configured into a perfectly usable desktop system.Search further
07/16/2009 Relevance: 8.70Amid the fanfare of last week's Chrome OS announcement, Google quietly released an open-source NX server, dubbed Neatx, for remote desktop display. NX technology was developed by NoMachine to handle remote X Window connections and make a graphical desktop display usable over the Internet. By its own admission, Google has been looking at remote desktop technologies for"quite a while" and decided to develop Neatx because existing NX server products are either proprietary or difficult to maintain.Search further