Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 7th Aug 2006 18:30 UTC
Apple At the 2006 WWDC in San Fransisco, Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced several new products during his opening keynote speech. Read more for a chronological summary of the keynote-- including the much-debated preview of Mac OS 10.5, Leopard, which, according to Steve Jobs, will ship this spring. Update: Apparantly, a similar feature to Time Machine already exists in Linux. It is called 'Dervish'.
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RE[2]: No builtin Remote Desktop?
by ronaldst on Mon 7th Aug 2006 19:01 UTC in reply to "RE: No builtin Remote Desktop?"
ronaldst
Member since:
2005-06-29

No, I mean like the built-in Remote Desktop (RDP).

Not the software from Apple that is purchased seperately. IIRC Panther never included remote desktop capabilities.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 5

Roguelazer Member since:
2005-06-29

Yes, the BUILT-IN Remote Desktop. ARD server is built into every release of OS X. The viewer costs money, but you can download a free copy of VNC for any operating system any time you'd like, and the ARD server includes a built-in VNC server. It's not like RDP is a standard feature on Windows, anyway. Since it's not included in Windows XP Home, that means that the majority of users will never see or use it. Just fyi, ARD's been out since 2002, and has supported VNC since 2004. Read here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Remote_Desktop

:-)

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 4

ronaldst Member since:
2005-06-29

The viewer costs money,

XP home includes the viewer. XP Pro has viewer and the terminal part. IIRC the viewer is also downloadable for NT and W2K.

Thank you for proving my point. ;)

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1

kadymae Member since:
2005-08-02

Not the software from Apple that is purchased seperately. IIRC Panther never included remote desktop capabilities.

I call horsefeathers on you.

I run 10.3 at home. Remote desktop is AN INCLUDED, BUILT IN FEATURE. You can't miss it, because you're prompted to install updates to it on a regular basis.

In fact, I was asked to download and install the latest update last night. And, infact, when I get home, if you still doubt me, I can provide a screencap, and I'll even have the "About This Mac" window open, too.

(I'll be asked to install the update to Remote Desktop again as soon as I hit Software Update. [Since it's a feature that I've locked out of use, I don't bother updating it often and will be prompted to do so.])

Edited to clarify:

OP said OS X had no remote desktop built in. It does, but what it doesn't have is a fancy GUI interface built in. That's different than saying there's no remote desktop/remote access capablilites.

Edited 2006-08-07 19:29

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1

ronaldst Member since:
2005-06-29

You fell into the same trap. You can't use it until you purchase another seperate Apple product. By itself, it's useless.

If you can't use it, it's not a feature. ;)

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2

PowerMacX Member since:
2005-11-06

The ARD server is built in in Tiger, just use any free VNC client. As for Leopard, I guess you didn't see this (and it wasn't mentioned in the keynote):

From Apple's "Mac OS X - Leopard Sneak Peek - iChat" page:

"Filled with fun new features, iChat turns any mere video chat into an event. Video backdrops, Photo Booth effects, photo slideshows, Keynote presentations, or an entire Mac desktop — you can share it all with iChat in Mac OS X Leopard."
(bold added by me)

Look at the video on top of that page, or read the paragraph under the "Share and share alike" heading. The video is nicer ;-)

http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/ichat.html

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1