- #OSX REMOTE DESKTOP CLIENT UPDATE#
- #OSX REMOTE DESKTOP CLIENT FULL#
- #OSX REMOTE DESKTOP CLIENT WINDOWS 10#
- #OSX REMOTE DESKTOP CLIENT SOFTWARE#
Connecting to a local Windows 10 machine over 1 gbps Ethernet has very noticeable lag and low framerate. MacOS version works but has horrible peformance compared to the Windows version. Also, while I appreciate the option that allows the Apple key to be interchangable with ctrl for edit operations and find, it doesn't seem to work consistently, and as everyone who has ever switched back and forth between the Mac and Windows knows, confusion over which meta key to use in editing will eventually cause brain damage and is likely to send hardware on ballistic journeys through windows (not Windows). So properly-speaking, this probably a complaint about the service and not the client app, but the entire eco-system is failing me in small ways.
Now, I'm sure there really IS such a way, but the internet is not my friend in helping me find it. Since there are some operations that cannot be performed via RDP - attaching to a VPN being one of them - it would be nice if I could just leave the PC logged in and operate it via Remote Desktop at the same time.
This works reasonable well except that the Remote Desktop Service on the PC requires that I can only be logged in either via the Remote Desktop app OR the PC itself. I don't want to keep changing physical keyboards, so despite the fact that the two physical machines are next to eachother beneath my desk, I use remote desktop to view and operate the PC while working on the Mac.
#OSX REMOTE DESKTOP CLIENT UPDATE#
This update provides some stability, usability and compatibility with Lion.I have a specific usage case - I work in a multiplatform environment in which I work on the Mac and on the PC. The Remote Desktop Client lets users connect to their Mac remotely. Switching between it and other apps is possible with gestures.Īlso included is 64-bit support along with some under-the-hood stability and performance improvements. Like the iWorks apps, iTunes now fills your screen in Lion thanks to full-screen mode. Keynote now adds two new “builds,” which are transitions called Anvil and Fall Apart. If you create a presentation and then accidentally save it with all the pictures removed, you can go back to the version where the pictures were still present. Versions works with Auto Save to let you restore documents to a previous version. If you accidentally save over some needed edits you want to restore, Auto Save also saves a version of the file.
Any changes you make will be saved to the file so that you can restore them if your computer shuts down unexpectedly, or the app crashes. Your documents, spreadsheets or presentations will all save automatically. For example, a report you were working on (which is saved automatically when you shut down thanks to the new Auto Save) will be opened when you restart Pages.Īuto Save will do as its name suggests. When you close down an iWork program like Pages, it will now open to the same point you were working on. The Lion Resume feature now works in the iWork apps.
#OSX REMOTE DESKTOP CLIENT FULL#
First, you get the compatibility with OS X Lion’s full screen mode which lets users click the full screen button in the upper right, and hides the menu bar so that you only see it when you need it. If you purchased them in the Mac App Store, they will show up in the Updates tab.
#OSX REMOTE DESKTOP CLIENT SOFTWARE#
You can get these updates by clicking on the Apple Menu and selecting Software Update. There is also an update to the Remote Desktop Client in the OS. With it came updates to iWork and iTunes to make them more Lion friendly. Apple updated their OS today, releasing OS X 10.7 Lion.