Main menu

SmartFeed by FeedBurner Subscribe to the site feed.


If you find the information here useful, then please consider a small donation, or linking to this site.

Recent Comments

Recent Tweets

  • @thommck Thanks for the feedback - I was surprised by that one myself but it seems to be popular!
  • @mbullock Thanks Malcolm - have to admit one of the other other club members set up the lights but I was quite pleased with the shots!
  • [flickr] My first attempt at studio portraits: http://bit.ly/azkw5G
  • No new integration components for non-XP systems to run on Windows Virtual PC without hardware assistance: see http://bit.ly/bV0sA2
  • Update for Windows Virtual PC without hardware assistance 32-bit http://bit.ly/aiBp2g and 64-bit http://bit.ly/9Yll3p

Calendar

October 2009
M T W T F S S
« Sep   Nov »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  

Archive

SharedView: Free desktop sharing across the ‘net

Written by: Mark Wilson

My friend and colleague Garry Martin just dropped me a mail to see if I’d help him test a new Microsoft application called SharedView.

I say “new” because it only went to version 1.0 yesterday, but SharedView (formerly code named Tahiti) has been around for a while now – Scott Hanselman wrote about it last year and Mary Jo Foley covered it back in 2007.  So what is it?  Basically, think Live Meeting, then strip out the VoIP bit, and the hassle.  What you’re left with is SharedView.  This application lets me share my desktop (or selected applications) with up to 15 other users on an ad-hoc basis.  It works through firewalls with no configuration and, whilst a Windows Live ID is required to set up a session, connecting should be as easy as clicking a link to navigate to a web page.  Because of this architecture though, it does need a working Internet connection (i.e. it won’t work between two computers on a private network).  It seems to cope pretty well with disparate screen resolutions too – I’m running 1280 x768 and Garry was on a higher-resolution display but the downscaling was still readable.

And I haven’t mentioned the best bit yet.  It’s free (and available from the Microsoft Download Center).

Comments

1

Comment from Ariel Antigua
Time: Thursday 15 October 2009, 22:45

Coincidence, today i just read that list and installed the application. :)

Write a comment

Please note the rules for comments and the privacy policy and data protection notice. I'm sorry but, because not everyone sticks to the rules, I've had to implement some spam prevention measures - if you're experiencing difficulties leaving a comment, please let me know.





The following XHTML tags may be used: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>