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    Remotely control a Mac

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    • bbigfordB
      bbigford @Jason
      last edited by

      @Jason said in Remotely control a Mac:

      @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

      @Jason said in Remotely control a Mac:

      @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

      @aaronstuder said in Remotely control a Mac:

      @BBigford If you know the right people the price is the same 😉

      I'm sure there are people just loading up VNC (free) and using it for business... we finally got all licensed compliant.

      Just frustrating that Microsoft gives away their RDP client to Apple for free, but nothing that goes the other way for businesses to stay compliant.

      There are free VNC tools, I would think some of the freebie VNC servers would work on macs and not just the apple built in server

      There's Free, Personal (small scale business), and Enterprise (large scale business)... Free is for "individual, personal use", I'm guessing we wouldn't be allowed to use that because it's being used in a business setting.

      It doesn't even have to have a wide range of functionality. I just need to be able to remotely connect and launch OSX Server (rarely).

      Which ones are you referring too? Most VNC is free not just free for personal use..

      I'm saying why does it have to me the native Mac one? Tight VNC etc are open source (not sure if they have a Mac version) but I'm sure there are ones for mac

      There were two parts... I didn't realize that Microsoft was at fault here, not Apple, since Apple has VNC natively built in but Microsoft RDC can't connect to Unix-like/Linux workstations.

      I was hoping to use the Microsoft RDC tool to connect to the OSX workstations/servers after enabling screen sharing, since that is the tool all the other admins use (I use Terminals, used to use nRemoteNG). Too many remote tools on my workstation. Just trying to consolidate where I can.

      KellyK scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • KellyK
        Kelly @bbigford
        last edited by

        @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

        @Jason said in Remotely control a Mac:

        @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

        @Jason said in Remotely control a Mac:

        @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

        @aaronstuder said in Remotely control a Mac:

        @BBigford If you know the right people the price is the same 😉

        I'm sure there are people just loading up VNC (free) and using it for business... we finally got all licensed compliant.

        Just frustrating that Microsoft gives away their RDP client to Apple for free, but nothing that goes the other way for businesses to stay compliant.

        There are free VNC tools, I would think some of the freebie VNC servers would work on macs and not just the apple built in server

        There's Free, Personal (small scale business), and Enterprise (large scale business)... Free is for "individual, personal use", I'm guessing we wouldn't be allowed to use that because it's being used in a business setting.

        It doesn't even have to have a wide range of functionality. I just need to be able to remotely connect and launch OSX Server (rarely).

        Which ones are you referring too? Most VNC is free not just free for personal use..

        I'm saying why does it have to me the native Mac one? Tight VNC etc are open source (not sure if they have a Mac version) but I'm sure there are ones for mac

        There were two parts... I didn't realize that Microsoft was at fault here, not Apple, since Apple has VNC natively built in but Microsoft RDC can't connect to Unix-like/Linux workstations.

        I was hoping to use the Microsoft RDC tool to connect to the OSX workstations/servers after enabling screen sharing, since that is the tool all the other admins use (I use Terminals, used to use nRemoteNG). Too many remote tools on my workstation. Just trying to consolidate where I can.

        Terminals has a native VNC client built-in.

        bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • bbigfordB
          bbigford @Kelly
          last edited by

          @Kelly said in Remotely control a Mac:

          @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

          @Jason said in Remotely control a Mac:

          @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

          @Jason said in Remotely control a Mac:

          @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

          @aaronstuder said in Remotely control a Mac:

          @BBigford If you know the right people the price is the same 😉

          I'm sure there are people just loading up VNC (free) and using it for business... we finally got all licensed compliant.

          Just frustrating that Microsoft gives away their RDP client to Apple for free, but nothing that goes the other way for businesses to stay compliant.

          There are free VNC tools, I would think some of the freebie VNC servers would work on macs and not just the apple built in server

          There's Free, Personal (small scale business), and Enterprise (large scale business)... Free is for "individual, personal use", I'm guessing we wouldn't be allowed to use that because it's being used in a business setting.

          It doesn't even have to have a wide range of functionality. I just need to be able to remotely connect and launch OSX Server (rarely).

          Which ones are you referring too? Most VNC is free not just free for personal use..

          I'm saying why does it have to me the native Mac one? Tight VNC etc are open source (not sure if they have a Mac version) but I'm sure there are ones for mac

          There were two parts... I didn't realize that Microsoft was at fault here, not Apple, since Apple has VNC natively built in but Microsoft RDC can't connect to Unix-like/Linux workstations.

          I was hoping to use the Microsoft RDC tool to connect to the OSX workstations/servers after enabling screen sharing, since that is the tool all the other admins use (I use Terminals, used to use nRemoteNG). Too many remote tools on my workstation. Just trying to consolidate where I can.

          Terminals has a native VNC client built-in.

          That is good to know. I had forgotten about that. I've only ever used it for RDP/Telnet/SSH. Hadn't even thought to check.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • J
            Jason Banned
            last edited by

            RoyalTS is a million times better than terminals. I think I paid $40 for it

            bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • bbigfordB
              bbigford @Jason
              last edited by bbigford

              @Jason said in Remotely control a Mac:

              RoyalTS is a million times better than terminals. I think I paid $40 for it

              Well I can't get the VNC protocol in Terminals working so I won't fight you on that one. Can't connect out to this stupid Mac via VNC in Terminals no matter what settings I input.

              Error log in Terminals says: VncSharp.VncProtocolException: Unable to connect to the server. Error was: No connection could be made because the target machine actively refused it 192.168.70.173:5900

              But the Mac doesn't have the firewall enabled. 😐

              bbigfordB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • bbigfordB
                bbigford @bbigford
                last edited by

                @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

                @Jason said in Remotely control a Mac:

                RoyalTS is a million times better than terminals. I think I paid $40 for it

                Well I can't get the VNC protocol in Terminals working so I won't fight you on that one. Can't connect out to this stupid Mac via VNC in Terminals no matter what settings I input.

                Error log in Terminals says: VncSharp.VncProtocolException: Unable to connect to the server. Error was: No connection could be made because the target machine actively refused it 192.168.70.173:5900

                But the Mac doesn't have the firewall enabled. 😐

                Got it working... but there is some weirdness going on.

                http://mangolassi.it/topic/9302/terminals-vnc

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @bbigford
                  last edited by

                  @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Remotely control a Mac:

                  @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

                  @scottalanmiller I was just trying to get around having to load another program on my Windows workstation, and instead just run the mstsc program for everything.

                  Oh, so the issue is that you want Windows to have the VNC protocol handled natively. That's a Windows failing, not a Mac one. It's Windows lacking the client to connect to EVERYTHING that isn't Windows.

                  Macs come with the server, client AND the client for attaching to Windows, too. Apple actually does everything right here, it is Windows alone that is lacking.

                  Now I see where you're talking about the failing... You can connect from a Mac with RDC because it knows how to handle a Windows PC. But you can't connect with RDC to a Mac because Microsoft's RDP program doesn't know how to handle an Apple PC.

                  Now I see.

                  Exactly. Windows has an RDP server, Apple and most Linux have VNC servers (as do KVM, Xen and other tools.) Windows has an RDP client. Mac and Linux come with RDP, VNC and X clients.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @bbigford
                    last edited by

                    @BBigford said in Remotely control a Mac:

                    There were two parts... I didn't realize that Microsoft was at fault here, not Apple, since Apple has VNC natively built in but Microsoft RDC can't connect to Unix-like/Linux workstations.

                    Well, pretty much all Linux desktops will do RDP servers. You don't normally because it's not that great of a protocol. But if you want it, it's one command line instruction away. I've used RDP to manage Linux desktops plenty of times. It's Mac alone that doesn't build it in, it's only that Linux doesn't turn it (or VNC) on by default because X has been there for three decades already.

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