Uh, yeah, that's what I am saying. The Remote Desktop client for the Mac is a self-contained app, so when you download it from MS website and "install" it, it doesn't actually install anything, it just unpacks the files to a directory on the Mac. You open the app, enter the IP address of the PC you're trying to connect to, then, just like PC Anywhere and Radmin, you see the connected PC's screen on the Mac screen. The Remote Desktop Client uses the TCP protocol, so it's just sending the data from the PC over the netwrok via TCP just like anything else. You can even play the music on the Mac, even though it resides on the Win PC. It's all in the settings you choose before connecting to the PC. Understand, you're not running MC onthe Mac, you're simply viewing what's on the screen of the PC you're connected to, and are able to interact, through the Mac's screen and mouse/keyboard, with the PC as if you were sitting in front of the PC. This, by the way, works anywhere. You don't have to be on the same network, or in the same building, or in the same country for that matter. In fact, my roommate's sitting at the desk behind me, using his iBook, controlling my WinXP PC that's at my house, which is 30 minutes from here, making a playlist in Media Center for our party this weekend.
Wobbley