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Dual-screen via remote-desktop?

Started by July 15, 2013 08:06 PM
3 comments, last by Ravyne 11 years, 3 months ago

Hello there, I have a little challenge for you guys.

So here it goes.

I have a desktop computer (A), a flat screen monitor (S) and a laptop computer (B).

Now, my laptop (B) is going to connect to the first computer (A) via VNC or something of the like.

What I would like is to have my remote desktop on computer B to act as computer A's primary screen, and the flat screen (S) to act like a second monitor to computer A.
Basically, I want my desktop computer (A) to be dual-screen, with screen one on my remotely connected laptop (B), and screen two on the monitor that is directly connected to it (S).

Can anyone think of a way this would work?

Any ideas appreciated, I've been trying to figure out a way for a while. I don't even know if it's possible.

Thanks!

You can mirror a display remotely, but under Windows I do not believe you cannot have it half-local and half-remote.

In a *nix environment with X11-forwarding you can push part of a display to another machine for remote rendering. It would take some effort to get the permissions correct, but you could forward half of the display to another X server on a different machine.

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I bought a product called MaxiVista a while back that did this well.

I think this isn't easily possible, since apparently Windows turns off the graphics card (or disables some features?) when you use remote desktop. At least that's what I'm seeing, or what I believe that I'm seeing.

First, when I remote into my desktop computer from my tablet, the desktop instantly disappears (and reappears on the tablet with icons scrambled) and the logon screen is visible on the monitor. A few seconds later, the monitor goes in power save mode.

But more importantly, when I launch Genetica 4.0 it tells me that my system (i.e. the desktop computer!) does not meet the minimum hardware requirements to render 3D nodes.

I've used a program at work called Dual Desk to view several remote PC's simultaneously. Each remote PC has its own window. If you connected to the laptop with a program like that, you could drag its window to the other screen and maximize it. There is a performance cost because it's basically streaming the remote's video output (and your inputs back to the laptop) to that window, but it's doable.

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Any reason you can't connect the flatscreen to the laptop as well? Most LCDs going even 5 years back or more tend to have at least 2 video inputs. If you do that, you can just run remote desktop in dual-screen mode.

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