Laptop as _primary_ display for desktop PC via LAN remote desktop viewing

PsykoTenshi

Honorable
Nov 18, 2012
49
1
10,540
As the title says, I want to use a laptop as the primary display for a desktop PC.
There's a few added challenges to this, however:
- The desktop PC does not have a display device of its own. By extension, I am not looking for a secondary monitor, but a primary monitor.
- The laptop is a 2007 Dell XPS M1530, and does not have a hard drive installed. I'll elaborate my approach to this issue later on this post.
- I would simply buy a LCD control board and hardware hack the laptop into "just" a monitor, but my country's absurd import restrictions leave me without that option.

After some research, the only plausible solution I've found was (these points is what I need help with):
- Have the laptop boot into a persistent lightweight Linux distro stored on a flash drive. This way it can be used without a hard drive.
- On this same laptop, set up a remote desktop viewer via LAN so automatically after log in, it connects and goes fullscreen.
- While setting up the Windows computer to automatically send its video output via LAN on startup.
Or of course If you have another idea that can achieve the same results, by all means it's welcome.

Some additional notes:
- The laptop is physically next to the desktop PC, so input devices can be connected directly to the desktop PC. I only need the video (maybe audio as well?) signal to be sent via LAN.
- This setup will be used almost exclusively for web browsing, so it can deal with a few milliseconds of latency.
- I have another, "complete" desktop computer to set up stuff with (such as loading the Linux distro into a flash drive, and a display to connect to the display-less desktop when needed).
- And "why not just buy a display?" Because budget is on the negative range, but I do have the hardware required for this.

This sounds doable, but I've spent most of yesterday working on this with little success. Setting up the LAN remote desktop view to even start working has been unexpectedly difficult. Keep in mind I need a cross-platform solution (Windows desktop PC host, Linux laptop guest).

Any help will be amply appreciated.
 

PsykoTenshi

Honorable
Nov 18, 2012
49
1
10,540

Oh, I was using VNC (trying to, at least) but could not get it to connect for the life of me. That blog post you've linked to gave me some information that has been eluding me until now however, so: Thank you!
Hopefully I'll make progress on this today.
Not resolved yet, though.
 
Reading ur post reminds me once when I went to my dentist and needed a root canal and he was saying, I'm too old for this! Can't just throw money at it uh? OK.

I used VNC before but for some reason this time was connecting Win7 to Win7 and it was so slow it was unusable, and I am on 1GB ethernet. So currently on RDP, but am aware TeamViewer is also a highly rated, free, x-platform possibility.