Hi there! I’m curently using Pop OS linux as my daily machine to work with. Though sometimes I need to access my Mac Mini M1 and I’m looking on some good way to have remote access to my Mac without getting of my Linux workflow. Both my machines are on same LAN and connected via gigabit connection. I have tried using RustDesk though most issue comes from image quality (I have 4K screen). If you got any sugestion it would be great.
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To be suprised Parsec ends up as most close thing I need it can pass good audio and image quality, only issue is keyboard :)
If you need quality just get a kvm switch.
Just ordered one today :)
Parsec is pretty convenient. I’m still a bit miffed they removed hosting for Linux from their app, along with support for Raspberry Pi clients, but it’s very easy to setup.
I love parsec and moonshine/sunshine
I use NoMachine between windows and Linux and I’m happy with it. According to their site they support MacOS.
same, it has a pretty good latency
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Does not work on Mac with M1 CPU :)
awww damn, that’s unfortunate :(
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/YBH3MAvylVg?si=dwSFDK6MQvEj92RK
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.
This is a pretty routine workflow for me too. VNC works okay, but there’s some special sauce in the macOS implementation that make it much more responsive Mac to Mac. For Linux to Mac, I waffle between NoMachine and Parsec. Lately I’ve been leaning toward Parsec and it’s a pretty usable experience.
Does RustDesk allow to change video codecs and parameters?
Try Remmina
I tunnel VNC through SSH for this
I like Chrome Remote Desktop for ease of use and for the ability to get to all of my machines no matter where I am. Great when using Chromebooks, too.
Anydesk would be worth a look, and free for none commercial use
TeamViewer. I know it’s proprietary but it works well. Just make sure that on Linux you’re using X11, not Wayland as the last time I used it, TeamViewer only supported X11.
TeamViewer was breeched several times resulting in remote hacker access to customer machines and all their data. Rather than issuing a mea culpa and advising their customers to immediately change their passwords, the company vehemently denied that their systems had been breached and actually blamed their customers for reusing passwords.
It took 3 years for these assholes to finally acknowledge that the problem had been caused by them, not their customers.
Trusting TeamViewer to protect your data and tell you the truth if they are hacked is a mistake.
https://threatpost.com/teamviewer-denies-hack-blames-password-reuse-for-compromises/118427/