![]() PCs have long supported a feature known as Wake-on-LAN. Google Docs is completely free, runs in a web browser on your PC, and allows you to edit your Google Docs or Microsoft Office documents from anywhere via a web browser or mobile apps. Microsoft Office isn’t the only game in town. Office for iPad provides a more powerful editing experience on the iPad, but note that all the mobile apps require an Office 365 subscription for editing (viewing is free). The Office Mobile applications for iPhone, Android, and Windows Phone also allow you to view and edit Office documents stored in your OneDrive account for free. To avoid mucking through a remote desktop session, your best bet is an easy-to-use remote control solution with an integrated file-transfer option. You can access your PC’s files on the go, too. This isn’t a risk with services like TeamViewer or Parallels Access, which handle the authentication bits on their own central servers. They’ll also be harder to secure, as any bot scanning your IP address from the Internet will see the services running on those ports and can attempt to break into them and compromise your PC. You’ll have to set up port-forwarding and dynamic DNS on your own to access them remotely. These DIY services aren’t as easy to use, however. You could set up a VNC (Virtual Network Computing) server on your PC to access it in a similar way, even if you aren’t using a professional edition of Windows. Microsoft even offers Remote Desktop apps for Android, iPhone, and iPad. For example, you could enable the Remote Desktop feature in professional editions of Windows and use any RDP (Remote Desktop Protocol) client to connect to your PC remotely. You could also skip the polished, all-in-one solutions entirely. Parallels Access lets you work on your PC desktop from an Android phone. Unlike TeamViewer, however, Parallels Access requires a $20 yearly fee Remove non-product link even for personal use. It really shines when accessing your desktop from a smartphone or tablet, providing a more touch-optimized interface. Parallels Access is another good, polished alternative. I'll soon try VirtualBox again on my trusty old Mac mini, that might resolve the VM network issues, then I can pitch Parallels for good.Setting up TeamViewer’s “Unattended access” feature. Powerline Ethernet has proven to be quite reliable so far, although sometimes I get a strange hum in the speakers connected to the Mac mini (I'm actually using optical digital out to a small receiver, so I know it's not an issue with the Mac). The MacBook Air has the same amount of RAM (8GB) as my mini so that's not a factor.īecause my main home computer is the Mac mini, I returned to Parallels because VB networking via wifi was so awful.Ībout a week ago, I installed a powerline Ethernet adapter, and now my Mac mini is connected via a cable. By chance, the MacBook Air was connected via an Ethernet cable, and the networking speed was vastly better. The performance was markedly speedier, even though the VM resided on the same external drive that had been connected to the Mac mini. Out of curiosity, I installed VirtualBox on my newer MacBook Air (mid-2013), connected the external drive and started the virtual machine. I finally copied the VM to an external hard drive, the slower drive still was acceptable. I eventually moved the VM to the internal rotational hard drive to free up space on the SSD boot drive, the slower drive performance was still acceptable even though the network slowness was painful. The virtual machine booted fine, performance was acceptable, but networking (via WiFi) was dog slow. ![]() I initially installed VB on a Mac mini (mid-2010 server model) with plenty of RAM (8GB) and put it on a speedy SSD. Also, some features seem to be more robust than others. VirtualBox for Macs appears to be optimized for some processors, less so for others. ![]() I tried VirtualBox a few months ago and here's what I noted from my experience. ![]()
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