I have a 20.04 desktop with multiple user accounts on a private home network. Sometimes we would like to use a Chromebook to access the desktop remotely, but the Chromebooks have been severely locked down (no terminal, no ssh, basically just the Chrome browser. I have an iPad on which I installed VLC, and VLC there provides a simple web server (simple HTTP protocol) for file transfer. I can access it from Chrome on the Chromebooks and transfer files in both directions.
I'm trying out shellinabox, but wondering if there is something more advanced. What I would like would be to connect to my Kubuntu desktop from the browser on the Chromebook, using https or some other secure protocol. (This is strictly on my home network but I would still prefer encryption.) There should be some login mechanism to restrict access to the user's own files on the Kubuntu desktop. I'd like the browser to show a virtual desktop on the Kubuntu machine. I would like to be able to view photos and open documents, but don't plan on watching videos or playing any advanced games, so gfx perf isn't an issue.
I need file transfer in both directions. One use case, for instance, would be to upload a PDF from the Chromebook to the desktop, then open it up on the virtual desktop with Okular and send selected pages to the printer (which is connected to the desktop).
I'm trying out shellinabox, but wondering if there is something more advanced. What I would like would be to connect to my Kubuntu desktop from the browser on the Chromebook, using https or some other secure protocol. (This is strictly on my home network but I would still prefer encryption.) There should be some login mechanism to restrict access to the user's own files on the Kubuntu desktop. I'd like the browser to show a virtual desktop on the Kubuntu machine. I would like to be able to view photos and open documents, but don't plan on watching videos or playing any advanced games, so gfx perf isn't an issue.
I need file transfer in both directions. One use case, for instance, would be to upload a PDF from the Chromebook to the desktop, then open it up on the virtual desktop with Okular and send selected pages to the printer (which is connected to the desktop).
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