Drag and drop

P

Paulo

Hi, can I do a file drag and drop from my folder to a remote folder on
remote desktop and begins a file transfer?

Thank you very much!
 
T

Terry R.

The date and time was 4/28/2008 12:18 PM, and on a whim, Paulo pounded
out on the keyboard:
Hi, can I do a file drag and drop from my folder to a remote folder on
remote desktop and begins a file transfer?

Thank you very much!

No. You can copy and paste text between the local window and RDP but
file transfer doesn't work.

--
Terry R.

***Reply Note***
Anti-spam measures are included in my email address.
Delete NOSPAM from the email address after clicking Reply.
 
N

Nepatsfan

Paulo said:
Hi, can I do a file drag and drop from my folder to a remote folder on remote
desktop and begins a file transfer?

Thank you very much!


Launch Remote Desktop and click on the Options button.
Click on the Local Resources tab.
If you're using version 5, put a check mark in the box next to Disk drives in
the Local devices section.
If you're using version 6, click on the More button in the Local devices and
resources section.
Put a check mark next to Drives if you want to make all drives available to the
remote computer.
Otherwise, click on the + sign next to Drives and select the drives you want to
be able to access.
Click OK.
Hit the Connect button.
Once you've established the connection, open Windows Explorer or My Computer on
the remote computer.
You should now be able to open the drives of your local computer and transfer a
file to the drives of the remote computer.

Good luck

Nepatsfan
 
T

Terry R.

The date and time was 4/28/2008 1:02 PM, and on a whim, Nepatsfan
pounded out on the keyboard:
Launch Remote Desktop and click on the Options button.
Click on the Local Resources tab.
If you're using version 5, put a check mark in the box next to Disk drives in
the Local devices section.
If you're using version 6, click on the More button in the Local devices and
resources section.
Put a check mark next to Drives if you want to make all drives available to the
remote computer.
Otherwise, click on the + sign next to Drives and select the drives you want to
be able to access.
Click OK.
Hit the Connect button.
Once you've established the connection, open Windows Explorer or My Computer on
the remote computer.
You should now be able to open the drives of your local computer and transfer a
file to the drives of the remote computer.

Good luck

Nepatsfan

Hey, that's cheating! ;-) He said "drag (from local) & drop (to
remote)". Forgot about that...

--
Terry R.

***Reply Note***
Anti-spam measures are included in my email address.
Delete NOSPAM from the email address after clicking Reply.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top