A split screen view with separate working areas that we both see, like in a video game, that would probably be nice. This was a few years ago so I was imagining a situation where both people were sharing the same computer and sitting together physically in front of it.īut I like what you said a lot. And another example, if you were pointing and clicking at something, say for example that you were drawing a painting in Photoshop, and I try to move another window from one side of the screen to the other and suddenly I am occluding your window, and on top of that you might click in my window. But then when I want to scroll, the suddenly you would not be able to scroll. In the past I was thinking that multiple separate cursors and keyboard inputs on a shared screen would be neat, but the problem with the way I was imagining things was in how do you make it so that both people can work together unhindered at all times.įor example, in the way I was originally imagining it, you and me would sit down at a computer and I’d open the editor and we’d make concurrent edits. The practicality problem of it is user experience tends to be rather suboptimal due to collectively massive issues, from network overheads, hardware acceleration issues or lack of support for it, workloads of sysadmin to constantly fighting outages, cost of client console hardware that aren't supposed to be full standalone computers but virtually it, etc. ![]() Since there is no way to determine whether or not that is the case via the API, the website will initially assume all bans are for CSGO, but if a match is later uploaded with that player after the ban date then the website will retroactively update its assumption and 'remove' the ban. Or some sort of PCIe hub can be used to connect grapevine full of Quadros. It could be that the VAC ban was in a game other than CSGO. On GNU/Linux, DisplayLink(not to be confused with DisplayPort) USB graphics adapters should work for this, or virtual framebuffers using Xvfb can be used to connect over VNC or RDP. Profile Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Approve Reject & ban Delete Logout Ryan Tannehill No thanks Delete Cancel. macOS Server had the same kind of feature years ago. They in turn asked us to send in documentation, which we did promptly. We contacted Valve immediately upon learning of the issue. This issue appears to be caused by compatibility issues between our anti-cheat client and VAC. Windows can do the same using the feature called Terminal Service. As you may have noticed, some Esportal players have been handed VAC bans in the last couple of days. ![]() Unix and Linux are a multi-user operating systems so there's no inherent problem with it. ![]() You somehow get dozens of display outputs, give Xorg with necessary config as to where to output and what input to watch, and run it. Procedures are more or less same for every Unix or GNU/Linux systems. It's not done often, as not many people must run 30 individual desktop sessions on a single server box at the end of the day.
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