Remote access keeps you in touch

Dec 8, 2006

Imagine you are miles from home and you suddenly realise you have forgotten to 
send an important document stored on your computer. What can you do?

It is an increasing problem because we are now far more dependent on our 
computers than ever before - in fact a lot of us can't do our jobs or even live
our lives without our PC.

In pre-worldwide web times, sharing information remotely was close to a black 
art. Networking was in its infancy and we used floppy disks to transfer most
of our data - at that time swapping files between computers was something you 
did with both PCs in the same room.

One of the first types of remote access was called Laplink. It enabled you to 
plug two computers into each other with a serial lead.

It was like plugging into a modem or a printer. You could look at the files on 
the other computer and move them across. It was essentially a transfer facility
and not much more than that.

Laplink is one of the few products that has ridden the technology wave and 
managed to survive the transition from MS DOS to Windows XP.

Now it is the internet that has been pressed into service to make our life 
easier. Today there are a host of services that allow you to go online and 
connect
to a computer far away.

We're going to start to get good internet bandwidth and infrastructure 
everywhere we go, because we won't be able to work without it.

One of them is LogMeIn which allows you to access your computer from any web 
browser anywhere in the world. It creates a virtual desktop that you can access,
display and use in a web browser.

Your remote computer contacts your home computer, wakes it up and promptly 
takes it over. The remote machine completely controls the home machine, but the
only information being sent across the internet is the mouse keyboard and 
screen data.

This also means you can use any of the applications already on your home 
computer, remotely.

Michael Simons of LogMeIn says: "You may have a contract on a USB stick, you're 
in an airport lounge and it doesn't have Microsoft Word but you have it
on your home or office computer.

"With our product you can simply plug the USB stick into the computer you're 
sitting at and then use Word on the remote machine."

You view the data on the home computer until you are finished and then you 
break the connection - the only downside is that your home computer is still
connected to the internet. For some people this creates security worries.

Rupert Goodwins, Technology Editor of ZDNet UK says: "If you're going to have 
to access your computer remotely then that computer has to be there all the
time.

"So the internet's on, the computer's on - there's a way into your computer. 
It's got security, so it's not an open door, but if you do not set it up 
properly
it can be quite a security gap.

Microsoft built remote access into Windows XP. It will also be part of Vista 
and the forthcoming version of Mac OS X for Apple user.

Mr Goodwins says once people start using remote access it becomes addictive. 
"We're going to start to get good internet bandwidth and infrastructure 
everywhere
we go, because we won't be able to work without it.

"So if we go to places that don't have internet infrastructure they'll suddenly 
be provided with all the things we've got access to, so our own revolution
will push the revolution elsewhere. This could be one of the big things that 
breaks down the digital divide." The BBC is not responsible for the content
of external internet sites

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/programmes/click_online/6161813.stm

Vikas Kapoor,
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