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Hello,
Needing to access a Linux laptop from Windows (in a nutshell, broke the keyboard) in graphic mode, I looked into VNC.
TigerVNC does work great for the connection etc.
But the performance is not that good. I am on a Wireless LAN, so perhaps it is more the laptop performance in encrypting the image than the system itself.
So I looked into RDP. The documentation claims that it sends direct objects and not a video feed like VNC does.
It is a bit an X forwarding for a full graphical desktop (don't be mad of the comparison !).
However, my understanding digging into all i could find on the internet, is that RDP between different environments manages the connection.
But that it actually sets ups a VNC session then. There is x11rdp but without X on Windows...
I cannot install X on the windows laptop to have X forwarding.
Is there any way to have Linux emit RDP "graphic commands" and not just a video feed via VNC ?
Or did I completely missed the point ?
I found contradictory information so not sure I got exactly what RDP on linux encompasses.
What about accessing a Wayland session ?
Any working system apart from a concept of VNC on wayland (as announced) ?
Thanks in advance !
Bye
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I cannot install X on the windows laptop to have X forwarding.
Why not?
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Well, I know it is possible to install (and did so on other machines with good results) but can't on that one.
But Windows provides an RDP client so I can use that with good performance if RDP is not just the connection setup with an underlying VNC.
Or does RDP always fallback to VNC "video feed" type ?
Thanks in advance !
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