![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The full version has a second keyboard that contains all the function keys, the Windows key, page navigation keys, and two special Windows meta-keys: Control-Alt-Delete and Alt-F4. (There are onscreen buttons for Control and Command, but not Option.) While this works OK for controlling Macs, you really need Control-Alt-Delete to work with Windows boxes, because otherwise you can’t login. The biggest limitation in the free version is that the only provided keyboard is the standard iPhone virtual keyboard-so no function keys, and no other special keys. There aren’t many differences between the free and paid version of Mocha VNC, but the differences that exist are significant. Buttons along the bottom of the screen provide access to features such as the on-screen keyboard, Mocha VNC’s menus, a right mouse button, and a button to control what happens when you drag a finger across the screen-one mode moves the remote mouse pointer, the other just scrolls around on your zoomed-in display. You can, however, zoom in and out on the screen as you would with a web page, and display the remote screen in portrait or landscape mode simply by turning your iPhone or iPod touch. There are some limits with Mocha VNC-it only supports a single monitor on the remote system, and the maximum resolution of that monitor is 1,680-by-1,200. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |