Thanks guys. It remains to be seen whether a remote desktop pair (of any protocol) will work with complex video editing in real time. Here again, the needs are generally parallel with gaming. Though there are some differences.
Some thoughts:
Resolution conversions occurring while editing in real time:
The Editor is rendering the track clips' resolution and converting to the Monitor window resolution
The Monitor resolution is running at the Host's machine's resolution, or less, depending on the size of the window.
The Client resolution is at whatever the remote desktop client software permits on that client machine.
So there's a lot of conversion going on. Monitor video resolution while editing does not need to be as high as the final rendered video will be. Reduction in any of the various resolutions will help prevent lag, as long as the displayed resolution in the remote desktop's window is adequate for the purpose.
Generally, in editing, you do want to be able to view the monitor full screen on the remote desktop, at times. As a result, the client should ultimately present a moderate resolution full screen, not necessarily the highest possible. This is different from gaming.
Video Cards:
I'm also thinking that high powered video gaming graphics cards may not be of much help for video editing in general. On the host, a lot would depend on how much a GPU offloads video processing from the main CPU. On a gamer card, there may not be much assistance for things like color correction, or dissolves, or fades because gaming focuses on different rendering tasks. Yet those are the most common processing requirements in video editing.
In fact, since a remote desktop editor is analogous to headless server operation, a video card is probably no help at all. In an ideal world, a graphics card would be able to directly interface to a client via a wireless protocol.
The wireless LAN:
Besides resolution and graphics processing, the most important final consideration in a remote desktop for video editing is LAN speed. Important to that are, the RD protocol chosen, wireless protocol, host and client RD applications, and the NIC hardware.
For wireless I've thought about whether ad hoc LAN connection would be preferable to communicating through a router. Internet authorities disagree about whether ad hoc connection is faster or slower. I guess the only way is to try it and compare. One advantage in my case for a router connection is that my wireless router is close enough to the host computer to use a wired connection. Thus no need for a wireless card in the host. However, I'm not sure what wireless protocols the router supports -- 802.11 ax would be preferable for higher speeds.