8/4/2023 0 Comments Teamviewer for mac tabletSo generally I recommend HPZ remote boost, free trial cant go wrong and if you have a HP machine then there is no competition really.TeamViewer APK is one of the most widely used remote access software for its simplicity that allows you to easily share and control desktops, hold online meetings or transfer files between computers. Performance is really good honestly, it just works, is stable and does what its supposed to audio can be a bit of a pain but its gotten better some features like wacom pressure is a bit hit and miss Free when you have a HP machine, cant beat that best user experience but its just BARELY better than HPZ, at least for my usecases. expensive but cheaper than HPZ when using a lot of licenses clumsy settings, just no options for anything all done by the host and not the users specific ULTRA needs quicksync, so intel GPU on client to work with PcoIP Ultra, xeons, AMD dont have that PcoIP “Ultra” really still is just h264 as far as I can tell… needs Quadro GPU on host to really work Lots of black screens, annoying stuff, cant recommend hostcard makes using both Tera and Directly connected screens impossible Zeroclient hardware limited to certain wacom tables is complete garbage with a software client I have been using tera and HP Z for a long while between Windows and Linux and both clients, even way before Covid, so for me it comes down to these conclusions for Linux hosts(centOS specifically)Ĭhoices: Teradici Hostcard, Teradici software aka CloudAccess+, HP Z Remote boost But if you are in more of a patch panel situation where you can set it and forget an artist connected to a Mac for a few weeks or months, then the solution scales well.Īll in your looking at around $2k for the external host and $1k for the Zero client per Mac. If you need A video router because you’re changing daily or weekly machine assignments, you’ll need a broker and licenses for that and it’s ugly. If you have multiple hosts and multiple clients, you could set up each client to only accept connections from a particular MAC address. It does get hard real fast if you have to negotiate changeable workstation assignments. It’s a delightfully simple setup that most would be able to figure out if you know basic networking. I’ve found that 30-50Mbps is good to reserve for it, and hope that you are in 40-50ms or faster for good interactivity. And you can connect usb devices and setup which types of devices to allow. But stick to 1920x1080 or 2560x whatever. I wanted to share because it’s a great service. I’m not getting any discounts or money from these guys. Also, it’s all software based and the devs are constantly adding new features like pen pressure and audio support. But this really fills a need for Mac-centric companies. Of course, this is all dependent on the speed of your internet bandwidth on the server and client side. The interface is really intuitive and easy. Users can only access machines they are assigned to or a group of computers. You need Enterprise level ($19.99/user/month or $15.99/month if you pay in advance) to enable the pen pressure support.īeside the speed and compatibility with Macs, I would say the other great thing about Jump is the admin web based console. You can install the server on unlimited machines and you only get charged per User per month. Anyways, the important thing is that in Flame it works. They are using some generic pen pressure driver on the client end that sends to the mac server, so you can’t customize the pen pressure profile. It works well but one caveat is that it’s not using a Wacom specific driver. You can get realtime playback with audio, sharp graphics (in full screen mode), really low latency (especially for painting and zooming in the batch schematic) and all the keyboard shortcuts work (if you tweak the settings a certain way…I think they changed the defaults recently so now it works out of the box).Īlso, they just rolled out pen pressure support for Mac hosts / clients, which I helped to beta test and iron out some bugs. Then I stumbled across Jump Desktop ( ) and it’s been a game changer. But we have a lot of macs so couldn’t use PCOIP or HP Boost. Most of you probably already have a remote desktop solution and we were getting by with various solutions like Anydesk and Teamviewer which were only ‘ok’.
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