Access Local Hard Drive Through Teamviewer On Mac

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Need access to an unattended device? You don’t have to be there in-person or send a person to grant you access. You can securely access an unattended device with the appropriate permissions in one simple click.

Apr 21, 2018  And finally, you can connect an external hard drive to your router and access it from anywhere; Related: 5 Ways To Kick People Off Your WiFi Network. Why not use remote desktop apps like TeamViewer? While you can also access your router with apps like TeamViewer, you need to keep the computer turned on at your home all the time. TeamViewer Host is used for 24/7 access to remote computers, which makes it an ideal solution for uses such as remote monitoring, server maintenance, or connecting to a PC or Mac in the office or at home. Install TeamViewer Host on an unlimited number of computers and devices. As a licensed user, you have access to them all!

Access Local Hard Drive Through Teamviewer On Mac Windows 10

With TeamViewer™, you never have to worry about your connection being compromised. Assign rights to all devices in the beginning so that the wrong person never gets access to devices they shouldn’t.

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I would like to be able to access all my local hard drive files including documents, videos, audio, photographs, etc when I don’t have my laptop with me.

Google does some of the stuff and some sites will do pics, etc. but I need a all in one solution.

Tried the Iomega hardware and software, but it’s a piece of crap. Slow, keeps dropping off the URL and totally unmanageable.

Access Local Hard Drive Through Teamviewer On Mac Windows 10

  1. Simplest yet effective solution :
    TONIDO
    http://www.tonido.com

  2. This is actually a perfect job for the cloud, but if you have ADSL like I do, good luck uploading all those files.

    Have you tried SSH (Secure Shell) or remote desktop? For Windows, you can use the PuTTY SSH Client.

    If you'd rather do remote desktop, Windows has a built in remote desktop solution built-in, but it's not as good as RealVNC(Trial, but very good) or TightVNC (Free). After the initial setup, the rest is pretty easy. They both have really good documentation.

    Other notable remote desktop clients are LogMeIn(Classified as a VPN) and Teamviewer (free) and GoTo My PC (Trial, never tried it).

    If you don't mind converting a home desktop computer into an FTP server, you could attach the storage devices to it and use an FTP Client to download the files from your home server.

  3. Right now I can think of two possible solutions:

    1. setup remote access to your computer (requires your device to be turned on, speed depends on your internet connection) e.g. via VPN connection or something like Pogoplug with an external hard drive.

    2. use some online/cloud storage or backup service e.g. Dropbox, Skydrive (limited file size and storage, depending on your requirements monthly fees)