THE DEVICE AND THE SOFTWARE ARE PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND BY DISPLAYLINK AND THE ENTIRE RISK OF USE REMAINS WITH YOU. All rights not expressly granted to the Company are reserved to DisplayLink. The Company may not loan, rent, lease or license the Software or any copy of the Software to a third party or operate the Software for the benefit of any third party.Īll intellectual property rights in the Software and user documentation are owned by DisplayLink and are protected by copyright and other intellectual property laws, international treaty provisions and applicable national laws. If the Company wishes to obtain further interface information relating to the Software to achieve interoperability and system stability, a request should be made in writing to DisplayLink. The Company may not modify the Software and will not reverse engineer, decompile or disassemble the Software (except to the extent such activities may not be prohibited under applicable law). Company is responsible for all acts and omissions of its employees and consultants in connection with this Agreement. Company shall ensure that all consultants are bound by written agreements that are consistent with the terms of this Agreement. The Software may be used for internal use only by employees or consultants of the Company in connection with use of the Device for its intended purpose and not for any other purposes. Affiliates shall mean any company that, directly or indirectly, Controls, is Controlled by or is under common Control with DisplayLink.Ĭompany may copy and install the Software only on equipment that is connected to products that incorporate the Devices. Any reference to DisplayLink under this Agreement shall include its Affiliates. All Software is subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement. The Company wishes to manage the installation and deployment of the Software for use by its employees and consultants. The company identified below ("Company") has obtained certain products that incorporate DisplayLink ASIC devices ("Devices") and end user software that enables the functionality of the Devices (the "Software"). Now you can run GUI commands on your RPi and they will appear on your PC desktop as if they were running on the latter (though they will not be as responsive) and they will be using your Desktop PC's graphics card.ENTERPRISE LICENSE FOR DISPLAYLINK SYSTEM SOFTWARE using who I found my Linux Desktop PC was at 192.168.0.26 so this, using the default number becomes: export DISPLAY=192.168.0.26:0.0. ssh has the bonus that with the -Y option it will normally configure the correct value for the DISPLAY environmental variable but in some cases you might have set it with something of the form: export DISPLAY="Desktop PC name""Display number" e.g. Next use ssh with the -Y option to enable "trusted X11 forwarding" so that the latter are not subjected to the X11 SECURITY extension controls (which thus become a possible security hole, there may be safer ways to achieve the same linkage). The Mac platform, also being a *nix derivative may also have something that will work but I'm not an expert on those. Other OSs like those from Redmond in the USA are more work but Cygwin may be of use (though I cannot recall whether the XWin server is there or in the CygwinPorts testing part). If you already have one running like I do on a Linux Desktop then you are set to go. It is called, * inserts drum-roll*: "X11" and is what is involved when you run an X server on your PC Desktop (which has the Graphics Card in it) and connect to your RPi via ssh:įirst, you will want an Xserver running that the RPi can connect to. I originally flagged this as being, possibly seriously, Off-Topic but technically there is a further method that make it possible to connect a graphics card to the RPi and have the latter generate content that is displayed on the former.
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