What is Desktop Sharing (or Screen Sharing)?
Desktop sharing (Screen Sharing) is a common name for technologies and products that allow remote access and remote collaboration on a person's computer desktop through a graphical Terminal emulator.
The most common two scenarios for desktop sharing are:
Remote log-in
Real-time collaboration
Remote log-in allows users to connect to their own desktop while being physically away from their computer. Systems that support the X Window System, typically Unix-based ones, have this ability "built in". Windows versions starting from Windows 2000 have a built-in solution for remote access as well in the form of Remote Desktop Protocol and prior to that in the form of Microsoft's NetMeeting.
The product Multi Screen Remote Desktop provides Windows solution for remote log-in.
The shortcoming of the above solutions are their inability to work outside of a single NAT environment. A number of commercial products overcome this restriction by tunneling the traffic through rendezvous servers.
Real-time collaboration is much a bigger area of desktop sharing use, and it has gained recent momentum as an important component of rich multimedia communications. Desktop sharing (Screen Sharing), when used in conjunction with other components of multimedia communications such as audio and video, creates the notion of virtual space where people can meet, socialize and work together. On the larger scale, this area is also referred as web conferencing.
Recommended desktop sharing software with audio and video: ScreenCast Pro
Associated items about desktop sharing and screen sharing software can be found here:
remote desktop software
remote access software
Try out desktop sharing and screen sharing software by DGTSoft below:
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