Desktop sharing

Desktop sharing is a common name for technologies and products that allow remote access and remote collaboration on a person's computer desktop through a graphical Terminal emulator.

The most common two scenarios for desktop sharing are:

Remote log-in allows users to connect to their own desktop while being physically away from their computer. Systems that support the X Window System, typically Unix-based ones, have this ability "built in". Windows versions starting from Windows 2000 have a built-in solution for remote access as well in the form of Remote Desktop Protocol and prior to that in the form of Microsoft’s NetMeeting.

The open source product VNC provides cross-platform solution for remote log-in. Virtual Network Computing (VNC): Making Remote Desktop Sharing Possible Remote desktop sharing is accomplished through a common client/server model. The client, or VNC viewer, is installed on a local computer and then connects to the network via a server component, which is installed on a remote computer. In a typical VNC session, all keystrokes and mouse clicks are registered as if the client were actually performing tasks on the end-user machine.[1]

The shortcoming of the above solutions are their inability to work outside of a single NAT environment. A number of commercial products overcome this restriction by tunneling the traffic through rendezvous servers.

Apple users require Apple Remote Desktop (ARD)

Real-time collaboration is much a bigger area of desktop sharing use, and it has gained recent momentum as an important component of rich multimedia communications. Desktop sharing, when used in conjunction with other components of multimedia communications such as audio and video, creates the notion of virtual space where people can meet, socialize and work together. On the larger scale, this area is also referred as web conferencing.

Comparison of notable desktop sharing software

Application/tool Cost Screen sharing Remote access Instant messaging Share control Video conferencing File transfer Supported operating systems
AnyDesk Free for private use, Professional versions start at €60/year Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Windows, Linux
BeAnywhere Free professional version available Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Windows, Java, Mac, Android
Chrome Remote Desktop Free Yes Yes Yes, Using Hangouts Yes Yes, Using Hangouts No Chrome OS, Linux (beta), OS X, iOS, Windows, Android
Glance $49.95/month, free trial available Yes No Yes Yes Yes No (No download) Windows, Mac, Linux, iPhone, Android
GoToMyPC $19.95/month Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows, Mac
Guacamole[2] Free Yes Yes No No Windows, Linux, Mac
HipChat $2/month per user Yes No Yes Yes Yes Windows, Mac, Linux, iPhone/iPad, Android
IBM Lotus Sametime $338.00 annual Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows, Linux, Mac
join.me $13 – $19/month, Basic=free for non-commercial use with ads Yes Yes No Yes No Yes Windows, Mac, iPhone, iPad, Android
LogMeIn Free trial, then minimum of $49/year allowing control of 2 PCs Yes Yes No No No Yes Windows, Mac, iPhone, iPad, Android
Mikogo $19 – $25/month, free for non-commercial use Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows, Mac, Linux, iPhone, iPad, Android
Nefsis Free version available Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows
Netviewer $39.90/month, free for non-commercial use Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows, Mac
RealVNC Free; commercial version with more features available No Yes No No No No Windows, Mac, Linux
Skype Free since summer 2014 Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Windows, Mac, (Linux - no sharing as client or server)
Splashtop Free trial, then minimum of $16.99/year for consumers & $60 / year for business, allowing control of 5 PCs Yes Yes No Yes No Yes Windows, Mac, iPhone, iPad, Android, Linux, Chrome OS, Chrome browser, FireTV, FireTV stick
TeamViewer $749 – $2,690, free for non-commercial use Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows, Mac, Linux, iPhone, Android
Techinline $30/month, $20/5-session bundle Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Windows
Webex 45 cents per minute/per user Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows, Linux, Mac, Unix, Solaris, iPhone
Yuuguu $19/month Yes Yes Yes Yes Windows, Linux, Mac

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 23, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.