Windows XP Hacks [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Windows XP Hacks [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Preston Gralla

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Hack 58 Control Another PC with Remote Access


You can control a computervirtually
moving its mouse and typing on its keyboardover the Internet,
using either Windows XP's built-in features or a
third-party program.

When you are
at work, wouldn't it be nice if you could log onto
your home computer to check your email or find a file you took home?
How about using your home or office desktop computer from your laptop
on the road? You can use a remote control program to use another
computer over the Internet, viewing its screen on your screen and
giving commands via your mouse and keyboard. Windows XP comes with a
feature called Remote Desktop, or you can use a third-party program.
Windows Messenger [Hack #78] also enables people who
are chatting to share control of each other's
computers.

The computer you will control is called the remote
server

,
and the computer you are actually sitting in front of is the
remote client. Windows XP comes with a remote
client program (Remote Desktop Connection), and Windows
XP Professional comes with a remote server (Remote Desktop) that
works with one client at a timethat is, one computer can
"take over" your computer remotely
(with luck, it'll be you doing the takeover!).



Remote Access Server (RAS) on Windows NT
or 2000 servers and the
Routing and Remote
Access utility on Windows Server 2003 both act as remote servers that
allow multiple remote clients to connect.

Windows XP Home Edition can't act as a remote
server; if you need to be able to access a Home Edition system
remotely, you need to upgrade to Windows XP Professional or use a
third-party program. We recommend VNC, the small, free, open source
program from the University of Cambridge Department of Engineering
(information and free downloads are available at http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc).


5.18.1 Configuring the Windows XP Remote Server


If you want to be able to
control your Windows XP Professional system remotely, set it up as a
remote server. Using an administrator user account, choose Start
Control Panel Performance and Maintenance
System (or press the Windows-Break key), click the Remote
tab, select the checkbox in the Remote Desktop section of the tab to
enable incoming connections ("Allow users to connect
remotely to this computer"), and click the Select
Remote Users if you want to control which user accounts can be used
by remote clients. (Windows automatically allows connections from the
current user, along with all user accounts in the local
Administrators and Remote Desktop Users groups.)

Normally, remote clients connect to the server via a local area
network or a permanent Internet connection. However, you can also
configure the remote server to accept incoming phone calls if you
have a dial-up modem. Create a dial-up connection that accepts
incoming calls by running the New Connection Wizard (click
"Create a new connection" from the
task pane in the Network Connections window). Choose
"Set up an advanced connection" as
the Network Connection Type, choose "Accept incoming
connections," choose your modem, choose whether to
accept VPN connections [Hack #49], and choose
which user accounts the incoming connection can connect to.


Firewalls usually refuse
remote access connections[Hack #46] and [Hack #48], so if you want your remote
server to be accessible from the Internet, you need to open a port in
your computer's firewall [Hack #50]. Remote Desktop uses port
3389. If you use Windows XP's built-in firewall,
display the Network Connections window, right-click the Internet
connection, choose properties from the shortcut menu, click the
Advanced tab, and click Settings to display the Advanced Settings
dialog box. Click the Remote Desktop checkbox; if the Service
Settings dialog box appears, just click OK.


If you want to change the Remote Desktop server port to a number
other than 3389 (perhaps to decrease the likelihood of hackers
breaking through it), see the Microsoft Knowledge Base article
Q187623 (at http://support.microsoft.com, type the
article number in the "Search the Knowledge
Base" box).

When you connect from your remote client (described later in this
hack), you need to provide a domain name or

IP address. If your
computer connects via a dial-up, DSL, or cable connection, its IP
address changes each time you connect, and the computer
doesn't have a domain name. One solution is to have
someone at the remote server display the Network Connections window,
right-click the Internet connection, choose Status from the shortcut
menu, click the Support tab, and call, IM, or email you with the IP
address that appears. However, this solution is no good if no one is
available to do this. Instead, you can sign up for a dynamic DNS
service
[Hack #59] at http://www.dyndns.org or http://www.tzo.com. The dynamic DNS service
at DynDNS.org gives you a free domain name in the form <yourname>.dyndns.org (they offer
several dozen domain names to which you can add your name). TZO.com
provides a subdomain at <yourname>.tzo.com for $25 per year.
You install a small utility on your computer that automatically tells
the dynamic DNS whenever your computer's IP address
changes.

One final configuration note: when a client connects to your server
via Remote Desktop, the user logs into one of the Windows XP user
accounts. You can't log into accounts that have no
password. Choose which account you plan for remote user(s) to log in
with, and give it a password.


5.18.2 Setting Up the Remote Client



To set up the remote client software that
comes with Windows XP, connect to the Internet and then choose Start
All Programs Accessories
Communications Remote Desktop Connection. (If
it's not there, you need to install it from your
Windows CD.) In the Remote Desktop Connection window, type the domain
name or IP address of the server computer and click Connect. Log on
with the Windows XP user account and password for the remote server.
Your computer screen now shows what's on the screen
of the server computer. A connection bar appears as a button on the
screen, showing the IP address of the remote server, along with
Minimize, Restore, and Maximize buttons you can use to resize the
remote client window.

Once you're connected, you can cut and paste
information from the remote client window to other windows. You can
also use local files in your remote session; your local disk drives
appear in My Computer (Windows Explorer). When you print from the
remote client, the print job goes to your default local printer, not
the printer on the server.

Margaret Levine Young


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