- I have all the major Operating System flavors legally on one machine and at my finger tips, ie: Windows (in Bootcamp or VM Fusion), Mac and Unix (FreeBSD/Darwin), which is great when you're a road warrior.
- It's the only version of Unix-like OSes that has Micro$oft Office coded for it natively, can you say "PowerPoint" boys and girls?
- Let's be honest, they look damn cool and the Aqua GUI trumps windows, yes, even Vista, for sleekness and functionality.
- Plus the chicks dig it ... lol
That being said there are a few little snurks that disturb the otherwise stillness of the pond of my Mac meditation. Two of those are the lack of a few keyboard keys and a right-click touchpad button that I use frequently while connected via RDP to a remote Windows server.
If you have ever used Remote Desktop (RDP) to connect to a Windows server from your house in your undies, when you get a call at 2:00 AM from a frantic client about a critical service being down instead of having to hop into your clothes and drive 30 miles to their office, you'll understand it's incalculable value to you. I use it almost hourly, every day. (Man, I need to get a life.)
If you happen to want to lock the screen on that Windows server without having to log off or disconnect from the RDP session, then you are out of luck on a Mac laptop because you have no END key to perform the RDP version (CTRL+ALT+END) of the 3 finger salute (CTRL+ALT+DEL) to access the Windows Security dialog box so that you can lock the screen.
There is a way around this by creating a shortcut on the desktop of the Windows server you remotely connect to:
- Right click on any empty spot on the remote machine's desktop. Click on New and then Shortcut.
- In the dialog box that appears, type:
rundll32 user32.dll,LockWorkStation
- Click Next to continue.
- Enter a name for the new shortcut, i.e. "RDP Screenlock" or whatever makes sense to you.
- Click Finish to complete the task.
- If you are feeling particularly Mac-ish you can go to properties and assign a pretty icon with a key or lock or something. ;)
The lack of a right-click touchpad button can be resolved by either CTRL+CLICK-ing whatever you want to right-click on or by purchasing a Mac-compatible 2-button USB mouse (I prefer the wireless ones, myself.)
NOTE: The best Remote Desktops Manager software for Mac is a program called CoRD. I highly recommend it for creating your quick-list of RDP connection links and storing the credentials for each connection. Awesome app.
Enjoy!