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Remote Potato

2 big stars
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Name: Remote Potato
Works on: windowsWindows XP and above
Developer: FatAttitude Ltd
Version: 1
Last Updated: 03 Mar 2017
Release: 24 Jan 2012
Category: Internet > Remote Utils
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335 downloads
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details

Remote Potato Details

Works on: Windows 10 | Windows 8.1 | Windows 8 | Windows 7 | Windows XP | Windows 2000 | Windows 2003 | Windows 2008 | Windows Vista | Windows 2012
SHA1 Hash: f87d4c51570d1b9154986f282718ef4e146f2225
Size: 8.9 MB
File Format: zip
Rating: 2.347826086 out of 5 based on 23 user ratings
Downloads: 335
License: Free
Remote Potato is a free software by FatAttitude Ltd and works on Windows 10, Windows 8.1, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows 2003, Windows 2008, Windows Vista, Windows 2012.
You can download Remote Potato which is 8.9 MB in size and belongs to the software category Remote Utils.
Remote Potato was released on 2012-01-24 and last updated on our database on 2017-03-03 and is currently at version 1.
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features

Remote Potato Description

Remote Potato is an approachable piece of software designed to help you access your media library from a remote machine and enjoy your favorite photos, music and movies, regardless of your location in the world. This can be done through a web browser.

App installation and server setup

During setup, you can specify your user name and password (Windows logon) that will be requested every time you want to access your music library remotely via Windows Media Player. Although this is not mentioned, the app sets itself to automatically start at every Windows startup, but this option can be later disabled.
The tool gets immediately launched after installation, and the welcome wizard invites you to set up the Remote Potato server in a few steps.
It's possible to enable security by creating a username and password for server login, define the local network port for running Remote Potato, set a range of local network ports for streaming video to web browsers, add an exception for the server in the Windows Firewall, as well as choose the preferred method of access between external IP address, the DynDNS dynamic DNS service, or another dynamic DNS server. The last panel of the wizard shows the selected connection settings along with examples.

Connect to the server and share media

After setting up the server, you can pick your favorite media folders and TV channels to stream (if you use Media Center), start the server (forwarding the port manually is necessary), and connect to the Remote Potato server from another PC through a web browser. It also supports apps for iPhone, Android and Windows Phone.
Once linked to the server, you can view and play files shared in the media center, such as recorded TV, scheduled recordings, music, pictures, and movies. Evidently, this data must be shared in advance from the server.
As far as server settings are concerned, apart from picking which media to share, you can edit your main menu title, modify the default TV recording options and enable repeats, select the preferred level of quality, change channel importing parameters, and so on. While the server is running, Remote Potato can be minimized to the systray to become non-intrusive.

Evaluation and conclusion

The software application didn't hang, crash or display error messages in our tests. It used low CPU and RAM, so the server didn't hamper system performance either. The app features powerful settings for broadcasting media across the Internet, and it has counterparts on iPhone, Android and Windows Phone too.
On the other hand, the server setup may be a difficult task for inexperienced users, although Remote Potato does a very good job at explaining all the steps. Nevertheless, some might find these tedious, like manually forwarding the port to the router. However, you can test Remote Potato for yourself since it's freeware and actually works.
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Remote Potato Screenshots

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