
size of the Local Computer monitor (as measured in horizontal pixels by vertical pixels). As before, the
Remote Display Window will be the size of the Remote Computer frame buffer. If the Remote Display
Window is larger than the Local Computer monitor, the window will extend off the monitor.
Regardless of the size of the Remote Display Window (that is, whether it fits on the Local Computer
monitor or extends off the monitor), if the local user resizes the Remote Display Window to be smaller
than when it was originally created, scroll bars will be added to allow the local user to view the
complete Remote Computer frame buffer (see
Figure 2-5 Addition of scroll bars if the Remote Display
Window is resized smaller on page 17).
Figure 2-5 Addition of scroll bars if the Remote Display Window is resized smaller
NOTE: RGS does not provide a scale-to-fit capability to allow the contents of the Remote Computer
frame buffer to be scaled to fit the Local Computer monitor. If the Remote Computer frame buffer is
larger than the Local Computer monitor, the Remote Display Window will simply extend beyond the
edges of the monitor. If the Remote Display Window is resized to fit on the monitor, scroll bars will be
added.
Many-to-one connection
The RGS Receiver supports a many-to-one connection, allowing a single Local Computer to connect to
multiple Remote Computers (see
Figure 2-6 A Local Computer displaying two desktop sessions
on page 18) each running a desktop session—see RGS operating modes on page 25, specifically
Connection topologies
17
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