Hi ----- Original Message ----- > Support, > The Linux magazine article mentioned your product. Normally when I need a > remote desktop, we use mstsc.exe. We have VPN connections that then allow > the mstsc connection. I was on your download page and I would like to know > for a Windows7 workstation on both ends, which downloads would I choose? > So I get the client to server connection. Do you support a remote desktop for > Windows7 to Windows7. If so, I need the client on my remote laptop. I am not Sorry, we don't have such tools, to export a "normal" display. (it would be an interesting project though) > sure which product to use on the machine that I connect to. Can you explain? > I am assuming that Windows7 is fine. I also need to connect to Server 2008 > and 2012. > The Linux servers that we use and connect to could use a little explanation. > Do I need to use qemu to connect to Linux? qemu is an hypervisor, that you can run on a Linux host. It allows to run virtual machines, like a Windows OS, also called a guest. Spice is a remote desktop protocol designed to work with virtual machines (although it can be used in other situations). When you set up a virtual machine to use Spice, you need to configure the hypervisor (and should install some drivers in the guest for a better experience). Then you can connect to it remotely with a Spice client, using the server ip/port location. There are several Spice clients. The most advanced is virt-viewer. It is available on various Linux distributions, and for Windows too at http://virt-manager.org/download/ > Can you give me a simple list of downloads to use for Linux and Windows? > Would you also have a standard configuration setting for Windows and Linux? There are installer, such as spice-guest-tools, that will help you setup a Windows VM. On Linux, you need to install the qxl driver and agent, depending on your distribution. For a user-friendly installer, you may want to try GNOME Boxes. virt-manager is also a more advanced tool to setup and manage VMs. > I am assuming that we still use the VPN to connect before we start a SPICE > session. Correct? If your server is on the VPN, yes. > Product looks great. I am anxious to try using it. > Thanks, > Bob Willemin _______________________________________________ Spice-devel mailing list Spice-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/spice-devel