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submitted 11 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

My father is 75 and not very capable on a computer. He's got an old MacBook Air at home behind a typical ISP router for which he has no access controls (so no port forwarding).

My immediate need is actually not his machine at all, but the Raspberry Pi I installed at his house before I left the country and forgot to enable cron on so it's not doing what I need yet. However, it would be really nice if I could also do one of the following as well:

  • VNC (or something) into his computer whenever something "isn't working" rather than doing the talk-him-through-it dance over Skype.
  • Install a new OS (the Mac is no longer supported by MacOS). I don't know how plausible this is though.

My current plan is to email him a shell script that should create a reverse SSH tunnel to a server in Montréal or something and then I can shell into his Mac through there. It's not ideal though since we're still talking shell scripts and he's easily frustrated.

I know that in Windows land there are all sorts of tools scammers use to take over a machine remotely. Does Mac allow for the same thing? Note that I only have Linux machines available to me on this side of the Atlantic.

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[-] [email protected] 7 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

I use Parsec. I used Chrome Remote Desktop in the past, which was good; I've used Splashtop which was amazing too.

Parsec is good enough that I can remote play games on my computer from work without much of a delay. It's designed for gaming, so I rarely if ever have any issues with video corruption or not displaying a piece of software.

You can just make a remote-in account, set up 2FA (it's TOTP based, not SMS crap) and log in both places -- his machine will just show up for you to connect to whenever he wants help.

As far as I'm aware, it supports Windows and Mac hosting.

If you already have a pi over there, a PiKVM would be a good choice too - in case you needed to reboot/access bios settings, etc too.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

Those all sound promising. Chrome Remote Desktop sounds like the easiest for him since he's most comfortable with Google things. Thanks!

this post was submitted on 09 Jun 2024
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