Installation & update
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remote desktop w/ xp pro

Red
Advocate
Is there anyway to run Archicad through remote desktop?

Thanks for any help,
Thanks,
Red
i7 8700k
ROG Strix Z390-E MoBo
64gb RAM
EVGA GeForce GTX 2080
_______________________
http://www.facebook.com/flatcreekdesignstn
http://www.sraarchitects.biz
16 REPLIES 16
Karl Ottenstein
Moderator
Red wrote:
Is there anyway to run Archicad through remote desktop?
Hmmm. What's the way that it doesn't run through remote desktop? I've even connected to my desktop via my Dell Axim PocketPC wireless connection via remote desktop and could run AC ... but with a 240 x 320 pixel screen, who was I kidding?

Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 27 USA and earlier   •   macOS Ventura 13.6.6, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB
Red
Advocate
The image below is the message I'm receiving.
Thanks,
Red
i7 8700k
ROG Strix Z390-E MoBo
64gb RAM
EVGA GeForce GTX 2080
_______________________
http://www.facebook.com/flatcreekdesignstn
http://www.sraarchitects.biz
Karl Ottenstein
Moderator
Red wrote:
The image below is the message I'm receiving.
Sorry. Tail between my legs.

I guess I had tried lots of things except ArchiCAD. I get the same error message - see attached photo of PocketPC screen. Artlantis, etc. run fine.

So...I'm with you! WHY can't ArchiCAD run from remote desktop? The error message is wrong anyway - ArchiCAD wouldn't be running on the client - it would be running on the host. The client is only viewing the host desktop.

Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 27 USA and earlier   •   macOS Ventura 13.6.6, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB
Anonymous
Not applicable
Karl wrote:
I guess I had tried lots of things except ArchiCAD.


Have you ever tried VNC ? It's the software I've been using for years now to take control of a remote desktop, before WinXP introduced this feature... and ArchiCAD works !

Have a look at : http://ultravnc.sourceforge.net/ for optimized PC version.

As it's open source, there are ports to Linux http://www.realvnc.com/ (the original site) and even for OSX : http://www.redstonesoftware.com/vnc.html.

So you can control Windows/Linux/OSX via Windows/Linux/OSX...

But I don't know if there are clients for an Axim !
Karl Ottenstein
Moderator
Geoffroy wrote:
Have you ever tried VNC ? ...But I don't know if there are clients for an Axim !
I'll have to take a deeper look later - one of the web links you gave indicated a Windows CE version - which is the underlying OS of PocketPC, so maybe this would work!

I've used pcAnywhere for many years to take remote control - and without limitations, as you say with VNC... but it isn't cross-platform.

As an aside: WIndows XP's "Remote Assistance" provides the same kind of remote control, and is built into XP itself which makes it really convenient - no need to have a client install any software. I've found that fantastic for being able to help clients over the internet - I can see exactly what's on their screen. (Easy for direct connections to the internet - a pain or impossible if the client is behind a router or firewall.)

Thanks for opening my eyes to something new,
Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 27 USA and earlier   •   macOS Ventura 13.6.6, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB
Red
Advocate
I WISH something could be done so that remote desktop could be used. I don't like putting useless software on my computer when a great program like remote desktop is built right in. As mush as I hate to though I will give VNC a try tonight and see how it works.
Thanks,
Red
i7 8700k
ROG Strix Z390-E MoBo
64gb RAM
EVGA GeForce GTX 2080
_______________________
http://www.facebook.com/flatcreekdesignstn
http://www.sraarchitects.biz
Anonymous
Not applicable
Red wrote:
I don't like putting useless software on my computer when a great program like remote desktop is built right in.


I disabled this XP feature for security reason : there is an invisible account that could be used to take control of your computer if the security of your computer is misconfigured...

VNC is open source, free, the server can be installed as a service or not, can be accessed via a web browser or via VNC viewer, each connection can be saved (with or without password) as a config file for quick connection, configuration through a firewall is easy, and it is cross platform. -> what else do we need...
Anonymous
Not applicable
Karl wrote:
As an aside: WIndows XP's "Remote Assistance" provides the same kind of remote control, and is built into XP itself which makes it really convenient - no need to have a client install any software. I've found that fantastic for being able to help clients over the internet - I can see exactly what's on their screen.
Can your client easily enable or disable this feature ? If I had to create an access to my computer for someone external (even you ) I would like to know when my computer is accessible or not, without having to manually start or stop a service...
Karl Ottenstein
Moderator
Geoffroy wrote:
Karl wrote:
As an aside: WIndows XP's "Remote Assistance" provides the same kind of remote control, and is built into XP itself which makes it really convenient - no need to have a client install any software. I've found that fantastic for being able to help clients over the internet - I can see exactly what's on their screen.
Can your client easily enable or disable this feature ? If I had to create an access to my computer for someone external (even you ) I would like to know when my computer is accessible or not, without having to manually start or stop a service...
😉 Yes, it is by invitation only. Under System Properties (right mouse My Computer), Remote tab, you can disable Remote Assistance altogether. Otherwise, you are able to send an encrypted invitation via email to someone - an invitation with a specific expiration period in fact (1 hour, etc.) Upon receipt, that person clicks the hyperlink in the email, and gets a dialog asking for the unique password that you entered on creating the invitation. (I always exchange passwords by telephone.) At that point, you'll see on your desktop (you have to be physically present) a message saying "Karl is trying to connect to your computer, do you want to allow this?". If yes, then your screen would appear in a window on my screen - but as READ-ONLY...one more level of security. I would be able to see what you see and do, but would neither be able to do anything on your computer or transfer files. If I needed to do that, then I would click on the "take control" button - and another dialog would appear on your screen saying something like "Karl would like to take control of your computer. Do you want to allow this?" If you click "yes", then all is like a pcAnywhere session at that point - I can control the mouse cursor, etc. from my end. I, too, would only allow a VERY trusted person do do that on my computer (!) ...in fact, I'm so paranoid, that's probably nobody! View-only mode seems safe though AFAIK.

Also, you can cancel outstanding invitations from the same wizard. Suppose you emailed me an invitation to view your screen, and then changed your mind. By canceling the invitation on your end, I'd just get an error message if I clicked the invitation link when I received your email.

Of course, this being a Microsoft product, there are probably huge security flaws somewhere!

Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 27 USA and earlier   •   macOS Ventura 13.6.6, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB