developing UWP Remote dekstop viewer - c#

I wants to develop a UWP remote desktop viewer application. I had already gone through many tutorials but those are all of winform application and I can't port them into uwp. So that desktop can be viewed from windows 10 mobile. I have zero knowledge regarding this so anyone can help me from where should I start and also if someone having UWP remote desktop code so that I can understand its working easily.

I am afraid you cannot develop such application easily in the Universal Windows Platform. Microsoft has its own Remote Desktop app, but it is definitely using some APIs which are not publicly available for the connection to remote computer.
To develop such app you would need to capture / record the screen on desktop as well as capture all input and relay the input from the remote device to the source.
You could create the desktop side of the app using Windows Forms / WPF and connect to it remotely from a phone, which would just act as a display and would capture and send the user input to the desktop counterpart.
There is also a small chance you could implement the desktop app in UWP with the help of Brokered Windows Runtime components, but that would be very tedious work.
Once again however, developing this is a major task, which is more suitable for a team of developers.

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Show the Connect to a wifi UI on a Universal Windows Platform

I am trying to show the Connect to wifi UI on my universal windows platform, mostly on windows IoT and on windows phone. I found this MSDN documentation, but it doesn't really show how can I show the UI for connecting to a wifi. How do make sure user connects to a wifi before he/she proceeds with the application.

WIndows Form Application with bluetooth communication

In a normal Windows Forms Application for laptops (not a Windows store application) I need to communicate with a Bluetooth device.
For communicating with Bluetooth I need Windows' Bluetooth libraries:
see this link
Can anyone tell me how to add this reference into a normal application ?
My impression is that Microsoft has totally forgotten that normal applications need to communicate with Bluetooth as well sometimes .
Or am I overlooking something ?

How can a Metro app in Windows 8 communicate with a backend desktop app on the same machine?

In a situation where you have the UI frontend built using the new Metro style of apps for windows 8, and would like it to communicate with a .NET application running on the desktop on the same local machine (e.g. a windows service app).
What forms of interprocess communication are available between the metro app and the desktop app?
Thanks to Pavel Minaev of the Visual Studio team, who has provided some initial info here in a comment, quoted:
According to Martyn Lovell, there isn't any deliberate mechanism for
that, and some that could be used for it are intentionally restricted.
Named pipes aren't there, for example, nor are memory mapped files.
There are sockets (including server sockets), but when connecting to
localhost, you can only connect to the same app. You could use normal
files in one of the shared "known folders" (Documents, Pictures etc),
but that is a fairly crude hack that necessitates polling and is
visible to the user. -- Pavel Minaev commenting on this issue
So failing normal approaches I was thinking of using web services or reading/writing to a database in order to get some form of communication happening, both of which seem like overkill when the processes are running on the same machine.
Is what I'm attempting here making sense? I can see a need for a metro app to be the frontend UI for an existing service which is running on the desktop. Or is it better to just use WPF for the frontend UI running on the desktop (i.e. a non-metro app).
I'm porting my existing project to Win8 right now. It consists of windows service and tray application which are talking to each other via NamedPipes WCF. As you may already know Metro doesn't support named pipes. I ended up using TcpBinding for full duplex connection.
This post describes what functionality is supported.
Sample of my WCF server that Metro client can consume is here.
Also keep in mind that you can't use synchronous WCF in Metro. You'll have to use Task-based wrapper which is only asynchronous.
And thank you for you question. I was good starting point for me :)
There were a number of questions like this at the end of a //build/ session I attended. Aleš Holeček, the exec who did one of the big picture sessions, came up out of the audience to handle them. Even if you're not a C++ developer, download that session and watch the Q & A. http://channel9.msdn.com/Events/BUILD/BUILD2011/TOOL-789C
Metro apps can't count on desktop apps or services being installed on the machine. And desktop apps can't count on Metro apps running since they can be suspended any time. You need to start thinking differently. Listen to Aleš on this one.
Take note that with Windows 8.1 Update, communication between Windows Store apps and desktop components written in C# for .NET 4.5+ is now officially supported for side-loaded applications in Enterprise scenarios:
Brokered Windows Runtime Components for side-loaded Windows Store apps
To quote:
Recognizing that critical business functions and rules are embodied in existing software assets and that enterprises have a wide variety of scenarios for which the new application style will be highly productive, the Windows 8.1 Update includes a new feature called Brokered Windows Runtime Components for side-loaded applications. We use the term IPC (inter-process communication) to describe the ability to run existing desktop software assets in one process (desktop component) while interacting with this code in a Windows Store app. This is a familiar model to enterprise developers as data base applications and applications utilizing NT Services in Windows share a similar multi-process architecture.
Although implementing this approach is a bit on the complicated side initially, it allows for deep integration across Windows Store and desktop components. Just keep in mind that for the time being, it won't pass public Windows Store certification.
There is an article on InfoQ about how to build loosely coupled Metro apps with protocol handlers. This is something which has been supported by Windows for a long time and one could foresee an desktop application register itself as a protocol handler and maybe the metro application can communicate through this mechanism.
I have no idea if this is possible, but it might be interesting to check out.
Christophe Nasarre has blogged about a rather hacky way to do it using local files. The result is communication between desktop app/windows store app (referred to as DA/WSA in the blog), without having to switch between the UI of the two apps. He also blogged about another less hacky technique involving protocol handlers.
Note that having a WSA which communicates with a DA is explicitly forbidden by the store App certification requirements
Windows Store apps must not communicate with local desktop applications or services via local mechanisms, including via files and registry keys.
... but it restricts "local mechanisms" only. So I guess one can build a web service for routing the communications.
If you think that you can make an additional manual cmd operation,
you can try :
X:/> CheckNetIsolation.exe LoopbackExempt –a –n=<packageID>;
CheckNetIsolation.exe is included in winRT install, so there is nothing extra to be installed.
I tried it: it works, even after package updating.
As shown on: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/apps/Hh780593.aspx
Here it is explained how to find out the packageID for your app: http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/windowsdesktop/en-US/82bad7d4-d52b-4731-a396-13ab9004c1cc/how-to-get-the-appid-of-a-metro-style-app-
It is possible to communicate on the same machine from Metro app to desktop app using local service.
I've implemented some time ago simple "proof of concept", how to bypass the WinRT sandbox using local service. It still needs some kind of "social engineering" or direct guide for installing the service, but anyway, it is possible.
I'm not sure though about the certification rules about "local service" communication when adding such app to Windows Store.
Sample here
By design Metro application cannot access underlying PC directly, only using WinRT API and available capabilities. But when you create back-end service for accessing the PC and all data there, it's basically no longer running in sandbox.
The only "problem" is that user must manually install this back-end service, but that won't be a problem using some "social engineering":
User downloads "PC browser" Metro app, user can browse all pictures, music and videos, using WinRT API, but the app also shows message at the bottom:
"Download our PC browser powerpack and browse your entire PC, for FREE"
User is redirected to web page, from where user can download classic desktop installer containing "PC browser" back-end service for accessing files on users entire PC. Once this desktop service is installed, the Metro app can detect it and use it for browsing the entire PC. User is happy, but the WinRT sandbox is compromised.
Of course this won't work on Windows 8 ARM tablets. Using this workaround it could be even possible to build Metro app clients for classic desktop apps like antiviruses, torrent/P2P clients, etc.
Maybe I missed the point but when activating the Private networks capability I can connect to a local running (http) server using the local IP address (not localhost). This enables my scenario where a winrt app communicates with a wpf desktop app

C# application to connect to a mobile application using bluetooth

I`m asking this question again as I got no answer for about a week now ...
I want to know how to write a C# desktop application that can connect to the mobile version of the same application (that I will create). The desktop application will be used as a backup/restore for the mobile application.
I want to know also how to write the mobile version (using C# if possible).
May i know, in what way you want to communicate with the mobile version of the application? Ideally the cross domain/application communication is possible using services(WCF/Webservices).
I hope the following link may be useful for you : Bluetooth in C#, Which stack, Which SDK?

Terminating and Starting Data Connection on Windows Mobile 6.5 in C#?

I want to create an easy application for windows mobile devices, i have recently got a HTC HD2 and the connection is being eaten by the weather app, email accounts and windows live service :#
I am getting rather annoyed with this and well I have set myself a project to give myself a small piece of glory and create a working application that will Terminate an idle connection on my phone.
I am using C# and the latest WM6.5 sdk.
How do I access these controls?
You should use the ConnectionManager APIs to access device connections. It will create them or hand existing connections to your application. Closing a connection is actually very difficult to do (probably becasue it's not terribly nice to tear a connection out from under another running app) and has to be done via P/Invoking to RAS.

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