How to Remote Control your Windows PC with Email or SMS
Learn how to shutdown or lock your computer via email, Internet or SMS
text messages from the mobile phone. You can take screenshots, terminate
process or even download files via simple twitter commands.
It’s a long weekend and you’re happy because you’ll get to spend the
next three days with your family. You left the office in an excited mood
but as the cab was approaching home, you suddenly realized that you
forgot to shut down the Office PC. Oops!
It’s a sinking feeling because there’re so many confidential documents
on the computer and since most of your trusted colleagues have also left
for the day, there’s no point calling them for help.
So what do you do? Drive back to Office? Well that’s not required – just
take out your cell phone or switch on the laptop at home, send an email
(or an SMS or a tweet) and that will instantly lock your Office
workstation. And if you share the same computer with multiple people,
you can use another email command to remotely log off or even shut down
the computer from anywhere in the world.
There’s no magic here, it’s the power of TweetMyPC utility that lets you remote control your computer from a mobile phone or any other Internet connected computer.
It works like this. You first install the free TweetMyPC utility on any
Windows PC and associate your Twitter account. The app will silently
monitor your Twitter stream every minute for any desktop commands and if
it finds one, will act upon it immediately. The initial version of
TweetMyPC was limited to basic shutdown and restart commands, however
the current v2 has a far more robust set of commands, enabling a far
more useful way of getting your PC to carry out certain tasks especially
when you’re AFK(Away From Keyboard).
Before we get started, it may be a good thing if you can set up a new
twitter account for remote controlling your desktop and also protect the
status updates of this account to ensure better security.
Protecting the account means that you prevent other users from reading
your tweets which in this case are email commands that you sending to
the computer. To protect your Twitter profile, log in to Twitter with
the credentials you want to use, click Settings and check the box next
to "Protect my Updates".
Let’s get started. Install the TweetMyPC utility of your computer and
associate your Twitter and Gmail account with the application. It will
use Twitter to receive remote commands (like shutdown, log-off, lock
workstation, etc) from while the email account will be used for send
your information (e.g., what process are currently running on your
computer).
How to Send Commands to the Remote Computer
Now that your basic configuration is done, it’s time to set up a posting
method. You can use email, SMS, IM, web or any of the Twitter clients
to send commands to the remote computer.
By Email: Associate you Twitter account with Posterous (auto-post) and all email messages sent to twitter@posterous.com will therefore become commands for the remote computer.
By SMS:
If you live in US, UK, Canada, India, Germany, Sweden or New Zeleand,
you can send associate Twitter with your mobile phone (see list of numbers) and then control your remote computer via SMS Text Messages.
By IM: Add the Twitter bot – twitter@twitter.com – to your list of Google Talk buddies and you can then send commands via instant message.
By Web:If
you are on vacation but have access to an internet connected laptop,
just log into the Twitter website and issue commands (e.g., shutdown or
logoff) just as another tweet.
Download Files, Capture Remote Screenshots & more..
While the TweetMyPC is pretty good for shutting down a remote computer, it lets you do some more awesome stuff as well.
For instance, you need to download an unfinished presentation from the
office computer so that you can work on it at home. Or you want to
download a trial copy of Windows 7 on the Office computer while you are
at home.
Here’s a partial list of commands that you can use to remote control the
PC – they’re case-insensitive and, as discussed above, you can send
them to Twitter via email, SMS, IM or the web.
Screenshot :
This is one of the most useful command I’ve come across after the
shutdown command. Want to know what’s happening within the confines of
your PC when you’re not around? Just tweet screenshot and TweetMyPC will
take a screenshot of your desktop and post it to the web
ShutDown, LogOff, Reboot, Lock : The function of these useful commands is pretty obvious from their names.
Standby, Hibernate :
Don’t want to shutdown the remote PC? Save power by entering standby
mode with this command. Or hibernate your PC with a tweet, thereby
saving even more power.
Download <url> : You can download any file from the Internet on to the remote computer using the download command. For instance, a command likedownload http://bit.ly/tsadd will download the CIA Handbook so you have the document ready when you resume work the next day.
GetFile <filepath> :
The Download command was for downloading files from the Internet onto
the remote computer. However, if you like to transfer a file from the
remote computer to your current computer, use the GetFile command. It
takes the full page of the file that you want to download and will send
that you as an email attachment. If you don’t know the file page, use
the command GetFileList <drivename> to get a list of file folders
on that drive.
GetProcessList :
This is like a remote task manager. You’ll get a list of programs that
are currently running on the remote computer along with their process
IDs. Send another command kill <process id> to terminate any program that you think is suspicious or not required.
Conclusion:
TweetMyPC is a must-have utility and you never know when you may need it.
And if you have been trying to stay away from Twitter all this time,
the app gives you a big reason to at least create one protected account
on Twitter.
That said, there’s scope for improvement. For instance, the app will
wait for a minute to check for new messages in your Twitter stream so
it’s not "instant". The developers can actually increase that limit
because the Twitter API now allows upto 100 checks per hour.
And since the app is dependent on Twitter and Gmail, it will not work during those rare fail-whale moments.
Credit Goes To Amit Agarwal Blogger Of Labnol.org
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