Is there any way to use RDP protocol to connect from Windows *to* Mac OS X?
VNC is way too flakey.
ARD isn't really an option (unless I have totally missed ARD admin for Windows...)
So anything like rdesktop to be built..?
I need to be able to do at least everything VNC allows to, but can't afford losing the connection every now and then. Of VNC on PC side I've tried all the most common ones, of which Tight VNC Viewer seems the most stable.
MS RDP and TSclientX work but the connection is the wrong way. I need it *to* the Macs.
Would some rdesktop server work? I don't mind building it or using X11 if that's what takes, but it needs to be stable.
Or some magical VNC that doesn't suck so much could be the next option.
10.5.x, all Intel.
VNC is way too flakey.
ARD isn't really an option (unless I have totally missed ARD admin for Windows...)
So anything like rdesktop to be built..?
I need to be able to do at least everything VNC allows to, but can't afford losing the connection every now and then. Of VNC on PC side I've tried all the most common ones, of which Tight VNC Viewer seems the most stable.
MS RDP and TSclientX work but the connection is the wrong way. I need it *to* the Macs.
Would some rdesktop server work? I don't mind building it or using X11 if that's what takes, but it needs to be stable.
Or some magical VNC that doesn't suck so much could be the next option.
10.5.x, all Intel.
Mac Os X Rdp Client
For Mac OS X Tiger (10.4) and Leopard (10.5) PPC Macs I was annoyed to discover I couldn't connect to a newly-provisioned Azure VM from my iBook G4. After a decade of no major changes I revived this project to allow PowerPC Macs to connect to modern Windows hosts over RDP. Download TSclientX 2.0 (PowerPC) The GTK frontend has been replaced with.
Rdp File Mac Os X
- Aqua Connect Remote Desktop Services (ACRDS) enables OS X software and applications on that server to be accessed by diverse desktop hardware remotely. ACRDS delivers the Macintosh® experience via OS X servers to diverse hardware and software platforms and mobile devices using graphically enhanced remote access emulation.
- You can export a remote desktop connection definition and use it on a different device. Remote desktops are saved in separate RDP files. To export an RDP file: In the Connection Center, right-click the remote desktop. Browse to the location where you want to save the remote desktop RDP file. To import an RDP file.