In my experience, what you describe is the ideal situation, where you have an office workstation to which you connect via some kind of screen sharing app on your remote machine. You get the full horsepower of your office workstation and all the remote machine has to do is screenshare.
Terminal Server/Citrix is similar except that your office workstation is a session on a server. I’ve worked in offices where everyone used a Terminal Server session and had no dedicated workstation hardware, so ‘remote’ or ‘local’ were basically the same. Tom > On Mar 19, 2020, at 09:18, David Loeppky via 4D_Tech <[email protected]> > wrote: > > I'm sure there are more elegant solutions, but here is what we are doing. > > Our office has a mix of Windows and Macs. We use 4D, Quickbooks > Enterprise, and Google for essentially everything. > > We have installed Google Remote Desktop on every office machine. > > People are working from home using their home Macs, Windows, or Chrome > Books, connecting to their office machine using Google Remote Desktop. > > As I said, not the most elegant, but it works, easy to setup, and reliable. > > -- > > Regards, > > David Loeppky > ********************************************************************** 4D Internet Users Group (4D iNUG) Archive: http://lists.4d.com/archives.html Options: https://lists.4d.com/mailman/options/4d_tech Unsub: mailto:[email protected] **********************************************************************

