![]() Double-click the Macintosh HD icon, then open the System folder, then the Library folder, and finally the CoreServices folder (see image below): (The crooked path to CoreServices) In the Finder window will be icons for Macintosh HD (or whatever your Startup Volume is named), any external drives, “Network” and Remote Drives - if you don’t see Macintosh HD, go to Finder Preferences, Sidebar, and check the box next to the drive name to add it to the Finder sidebar. ![]() To find the app, open a Finder window, scroll down to the Devices, then click on the name of your Mac. This is the System library, not the User library. ![]() The app can be found in /System/Library/CoreServices/Applications. But as reader Chris pointed out, there’s a Screen Sharing app hidden deep in the dusty basement of macOS that is used by Apple’s own support personnel to remotely control Macs. ![]() This suggestion completely surprised me, as I either had never heard of it or had forgotten about it in the years since I was an Apple consultant. This post outlines many of the suggestions in those comments, and if you were one of the readers who provided a solution, please check out the bottom of this post… At the tail end of that post was a request for readers to add their suggestions for other remote control solutions, and we were amazed at the response. As the title suggests, we outlined three ways - Back to My Mac, Apple Remote Desktop, and Parallels Access - to access and control a remote Mac. Recently, we published a how-to guide titled “ Three ways to remotely access and control a Mac“.
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