Linux RDP Clients 4
michael writes "Does anyone know a RDP Client for Linux? RDP clients allow you to access Microsoft terminal servers - quite similar to Citrix ICA. I know there are at least two of them - from Compaq and Igel. However, both seem to be bundled with the hardware (thin clients). I spoke to someone at Igel last year and they said they were still unsure whether they'd sell it seperately (or even give it away for free). I wasn't able to reach somebody at Compaq. Are there any other products like this (free or commercial)? "
www.hob.de (Score:1)
There you can also find an online demo aswell as eval download.
For more information about thinclient computing, please check out www.thinplanet.com
Another way to connect to the Terminal-server would be SCO's Tarantella with RDP.
I have tried both, and they are both great solutions for linux-connectivity to a terminal server.
But...
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And you dont nead the TerminalServer, just a regular NT-server or even a Workstation!
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Wine (Score:1)
There is a nastier solution as well (which was what I used before Wine started to work).
1. Open up an RDP session on a windows box.
2. run VNC inside that session
3. connect to that vnc session from a linux box
4. make sure that the RDP session is not minimized on the windows box - this will kill the vnc session.
You can use the RDP client from the Terminal Server's console to log the sessions in, by the way.
Re:Wine (Score:1)
Well, I'm sorry. (Score:2)
The best solution you'll likely find (interum) is either VNC [rahul.net] from AT&T (free, semi-opensource), or one of the commercial ones listed on this X resource site [rahul.net].
Citrix [citrix.com] has a download site [citrix.com] with some multi-platform clients for their servers, but nothing for Linux (although there is a Java one).
I'm afraid that's the closest you'll get. Even then, they're not the best solution as Win32 API (and 99.99999999999, yadda, % apps) really were not designed with anything other than the assumption that 1) they'd be on the local machine, and 2) there's only one user ever on the machine. This is why VNC is a bit slow, and things like Winframe and NT:TSE don't scale well.
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