I use rdp all the time - both for work and personal stuff. For my personal stuff I want to be able to rdp into a machine and have the session continue to be accessible from the host machine. For example: In my home office I have my laptop (development machine) and my HomeServer which doubles as fileserver and workstation. I rdp into the homeserver from the laptop, open pandora.com to play some music. I want the music to play through the speakers of the HomeServer machine. Basically I want the same behavior you get with LogMeIn or VNC. Is this possible?
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...But the screen is stolen from the desktop when you RDP in, and then you have to unlock the screen on the desktop again without logging off. Which doesn't always work smoothly. Screen mirroring (allowing the screen to display in both locations) is available in terminal server (and Citrix) - but not in RDP. However if you are running a server O/S there are two TS licences out of the box and you can mirror the screen, with some minor pain. Simple answer: either fool around with "disconnect" and unlocking the screen, or try UltraVNC. | |||
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Options > Play on remote computer Don't log off, just disconnect the session (click on the X that appears when you hover your mouse at the top of the screen).
Disconnecting keeps all the info about your session in memory and is waiting for you the next time you log back in.
EDIT: try mstsc /admin | |||||||||||
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Yes, that's exactly how RDP works. It's like VNC, but works smoother (better display updating). To paraphrase something entirely unrelated, "If you like VNC, you'll love RDP"! :-) | |||
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Do you mean you want the applications you started when you RDP'ed into a box to continue once you leave that session? if so then that does work with Windows Server products - in fact I'm forever leaving code running for days without logging in, I'm not a desktop Windows user sorry but I suspect that this functionality will have been removed/hidden for desktop versions. | |||||
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you might try the /console switch? (might be /admin on later versions of windows) I know this is the case for server but not sure about workstations. To be honest, you might be better off just installing VNC; RDP is trying to solve a slightly different problem after all and it isn't like VNC is going to cost you anything. | |||
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