Scotty, I think that's the point of most people's problem, certainly my problem. Lock Remote Computer IS set to Never on the host machine. Whenever connecting to a macOS machine (running Sierra or High Sierra) it always logs out on disconnect regardless of the host's Lock On Disconnect settings.
Teamviewer Host 10 Mac
When you log out - is there just a big X or is it a dropdown? If it is a dropdown, then your "lock on never" isn't working correctly. Mine was working, then quit working even though it was still set to "never" on the windows host connecting to a mac remote machine. I messed around looking at the different options in that same window and that seemed to make the "never" work again.
The work around that worked for me is to end the session (The host computer locks even though I have my setting set for this not to happen), remote in again, put in the password and end the session right away (before you get logged in). The computer cannot Lock if you're not fully logged in, so it stays logged in
Unfortunately, this bug has been reintroduced in Mac v13.1.4170 (or maybe a close previous version). Many of my hosts are now constantly reverting to automatically locking the host on disconnect, even when I explicitly uncheck Action > Lock Computer > Lock On Session End.
I am experiencing this issue on my mac on the latest release v.14 of teamviewer. The setting is non-existent under the extra menu. This seems to be a regression in code that might result when the teamviewer code does not have good test coverage that can catch regressions like this.
Funny thing is that when I launch the program in front of the host and then later connect remotely the program does display everything correctly. Same thing if I reboot the computer and launch the program remotely.
This sounds like my exact issue, but the remote machine is a Mac.The remote machine is mac mini that does not have a monitor attached at all. It is headless.The issue only started after upgrading the remote host to Mac OS Mojave.I have used Team Viewer without issues on this host for around 6-12 months, without a monitor attached.Please note, **Third Party Product** is working perfectly fine and it's the only reason I can continue to work remotely on this machine.With an external monitor plugged into the mac mini, the problem is solved. You can then unplug the monitor and the remote session continues to work.After a reboot, the problem returns, unless a physical monitor is present.I'm going to try the dummyplug, that could be a cheap solution. They are under $10 online.
I found a workaround: I've installed the VPN driver on my client and on the TV host, and selected VPN when connected to the TV host and using the VPN tunnel I was able to create an RDP connection from my computer to the TV host and this connection can run and RDP client properly.
Sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo.......what is the point of using teamviewer then?
Set oShell = CreateObject ("WScript.Shell")oShell.run "cmd.exe /C c:\teamviewer\TeamViewer_Host-idcxxxxxxxxxxx.msi /quiet"WScript.Sleep 60000oShell.run "cmd.exe /C C:\Teamviewer\TeamViewer_Assignment.exe -allowEasyAccess=true -apitoken=xxxxxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -datafile $ProgramFiles\TeamViewer\AssignmentData.json"WScript.Sleep 15000oShell.run "cmd.exe /C net stop Teamviewer"WScript.Sleep 10000oShell.run "cmd.exe /C net start Teamviewer"
I am referring to the little handle that sits on the screen all the time. Since we are doing remote support of machines that have a very controlled interaction methodology, having that little handle sit there on the host is a problem. I am simply trying to figure out how not to show the handle.
I'm using Teamviewer 12.0.78517 on two OS X 10.12.5 machines. Periodically my host machine will have a notification "Pasting from " followed by the client computer name. This brings up the dreaded OS X "beachball" and both systems hang for a minute or two. What is this? How do I fix it? Thanks
Finally, by using the same TeamViewer account on the host and guest machines, you can more easily connect to your Mac and other remote computers by name. From TeamViewer on your Windows PC, click the option for Computers & Contacts. From here, you can now see each connected computer and double-click the one to which you want to connect (Figure I).
All sessions with LogMeIn Pro are secured via SSL/TLS. In addition, the identity of the server is verified using PKI (Public Key Infrastructure) and the identity of the host is verified using a matching secret key. Depending on the package (annual licenses), you can access up to ten computers, optionally display multiple monitors and access local printers remotely. An unlimited number of users can be allowed access to the files stored in the LogMeIn Cloud. However, this alternative to TeamViewer does not provide a feature for team meetings.
xxx 15582 14511 0 Feb21 pts/4 00:00:00 /bin/bash /usr/bin/teamviewer -infoxxx 15586 15582 0 Feb21 pts/4 00:00:00 /bin/bash /opt/teamviewer/teamviewer/7/bin/wrapper wine c:\Program Files\TeamViewer\Version7\TeamViewer.exe -infoxxx 15615 1 1 Feb21 ? 00:00:00 /opt/teamviewer/teamviewer/7/wine/bin/wineserver 2ff7e9595c
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