milkjug,

I have had some success in the past with Rustdesk, which works alright amongst all the other options I’ve tried. However, one word of caution is to temper your expectations on the performance side of things. Visually, it is nowhere near a native experience regardless of software or protocols I’ve tried.

It’s unfortunate that Parsec still doesn’t support hosting on Linux. It is the best implementation of Remote Desktops I’ve used so far, and I tried almost all of them.

It’s first-class in every metric, except it doesn’t host Linux (only as clients), sadly.

ikidd,
@ikidd@lemmy.world avatar

Anydesk for wayland machines.

lemmyvore,

Install x2go on the client machine. You need X and SSH on the target machine. That’s it, when you connect it will open a new desktop session on the server.

If you want to connect to an existing desktop session you need x2godesktopsharing installed on the target, you need to activate sharing in x2godesktopsharing, and in x2go client you need to select “session type” as “X2Go/X11 desktop sharing”.

possiblylinux127,

Do you need low latency? I use Rustdesk and moonlight/sunshine

vredez,

AnyDesk, best performance I’ve experienced when it comes to screen sharing.

gerbercj,

I use Chrome Remote Desktop daily. I don’t know if it’s the best, but it works great for me. remotedesktop.google.com

Hairyblue,
@Hairyblue@kbin.social avatar

If you were looking for a Remote Desktop program to help a customer or other user, TeamViewer worked for me on Ubuntu. It was a great way to fix an issue remotely with a Windows user.

But you may not be looking for this type of connection.

Pantherina,
@Pantherina@feddit.de avatar

RustDesk is a great alternative, FOSS and in Rust. Both only support X11

redcalcium,

Sometimes I use Steam Remote Play to access my personal linux desktop remotely. It’s actually works pretty great and can automatically reduce stream quality to match your current bandwidth. It also has a lot less input latency than VNC or RDP, though it consumes a lot more bandwidth.

gratux,
@gratux@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I’m a bit inexperienced in this aspect, but:

  • if you are on a trusted network (i.e. local/vpn only) you could give VNC a try. It’s somewhat simple, but far from secure.
  • the gnome desktop environment should offer built in RDP support, but i have not tried it yet. Also, just like VNC, i wouldn’t use RDP over the open internet.
floofloof,

To secure VNC you can tunnel it over SSH.

lurch, (edited )

The best way used to be XPRA. You can also tunnel it thru SSH, but not necessary in a trusted LAN. XPRA is like a per application display proxy that keeps an app running even if the connection is interrupted and enables reconnects as well as transfers of Xclient windows to other Xservers, i.e. you can transfer the remote window from your notebook to your workstation Xserver whithout having to restart the app.

Slapplebags,

I use this script to deploy xrdp. Works well for local stuff or over vpn / ssh tunnel and plays nice with rdp

c-nergy.be/blog/?p=19228

Magister,
@Magister@lemmy.world avatar

absolutely, xrdp and remmina, what’s the problem with remote desktop?!?

cizra,

I’m using VNC over an SSH tunnel. TigerVNC’s vncviewer even has the -via parameter you can use to make creating the tunnel seamless.

sun_is_ra,

vnc works on windows on linux

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