hi, about a month ago i ran across a site of a company that sells a software that caters 10 individual users with one CPU[connecting USB monitor,keyboard, mouse]. Sadly i forgot the website URL. any ideas about this? or anything related to it?
I remember seeing something like this on Wikipedia, so I went back to check. After some browsing, I found what I was looking for. I think the thing you are referring to is Multiseat.
woot woot i found it! userful = 10 pc, only for linux though miniframe = 8 PC, for windows ;D what do you guys think of this? and is Linux a good OS?
linux is a good OS if you know what you are doing. Also you don't need that software on linux, its natively multi-user.
yay! now the problem that still stands is it costs money. Anyone know of a free software? im such a miser ;D a few off-topic: what do you mean by "if you know what you are doing" - is linux a difficult OS to use? about userful, i browse their website but i cant conclude if their multi-seat software is exclusive to linux.
Well then you'd have to get started sometime because if it isn't for beginners, you'll never be able to begin.
yes, you begin with windows, and once you're good at windows, you try linux. And by good I mean you can fix problems and do almost the same amount with the commandline as you can with the GUI
Yes it's quite hard to use at first, harder than Windows, that's why they said Windows is user or window-friendly
you need to be comfortable doing everything with commandline, using UNC and full paths, to start with. Most linux distros have a GUI but the real power is still in the commandline.
ok...totally a noob about this. If i were to start studying the very very basic of computers, where should i start? to be honest i dont even know the command line and the GUI. off-topic: i just remembered a script of sheldon, a character from the tv series THE BIG BANG THEORY sheldon: "What is your computer? and please dont tell me its white."
windows is a GUI, and I presume you can use that to an extent. Being comfortable with installing and configuring windows is a good start.
Linux is actually not as difficult as everyone thinks. Okay, yeah, it's harder than windows but that's only because that's what everyone's used to. I installed Ubuntu on my laptop a few months back and I had a problem with it - the webcam not working and causing the boot up to hang for about 10 minutes, but things like this are easily fixed. I went to the Ubuntu forums, posted my query and the following day I had a resolution. All I had to do was copy the command, and paste it into the terminal, and viola! Problem solved. So in some cases, fixing things can be easier in Linux. But yes, I'd recommend anyone to learn how a computer works before switching. Only basic stuff of course. Also at this point you defiantly do not want to get rid of windows completely, at least not until Linux gets some more software support.
ubuntu does not qualify as a serious linux distro... And linux has far more software than windows, you just have to look for it and be prepared to compile it yourself.
Look for termsrv on google. Then you can find the fix to remotely log in on one pc with multiple users via remote desktop / terminal services.