With Microsoft Remote Desktop clients, you can connect to Remote Desktop Services from Windows Server and remote PCs, and use and control desktops and apps that your admin has made available to you. There are clients available for many different types of devices on different platforms and form factors, such as desktops and laptops, tablets, smartphones, and through a web browser. Using your web browser on desktops and laptops, you can connect without having to download and install any software.

Some features are only available with certain clients, so it's important to check Compare the features of the Remote Desktop clients to understand the differences when connecting to Remote Desktop Services or remote PCs.


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You can also use most versions of the Remote Desktop client to also connect to Azure Virtual Desktop, as well as to Remote Desktop Services in Windows Server or to a remote PC. If you want information on Azure Virtual Desktop instead, see Remote Desktop clients for Azure Virtual Desktop.

Here's a list of the Remote Desktop client apps and our documentation for connecting to Remote Desktop Services or remote PCs, where you can find download links, what's new, and learn how to install and use each client.

On your Windows, Android, or iOS device: Open the Remote Desktop app (available for free from Microsoft Store, Google Play, and the Mac App Store), and add the name of the PC that you want to connect to (from Step 1). Select the remote PC name that you added, and then wait for the connection to complete.

On your Windows, Android, or iOS device: Open the Remote Desktop app (available for free from Microsoft Store, Google Play, and the Mac App Store), and add the name of the PC that you want to connect to (from Step 1). Select the remote PC name that you added, and then wait for the connection to complete.

Yet another RDP workflow. This one works exclusively with Microsoft Remote Desktop and lists all of the defined desktops. It works reliably, regardless of the state of the Microsoft Remote Desktop application, this has been a problem with other workflows. You can select from the desktop list or continue typing to filter down to just the desktop you want. It's on Packal already.

If you need to use a remote computer lab, your instructor will list web addresses on your D2L course site. (Learn more about D2L.) Be sure to use the web address for connecting to remote computers via desktop application. Connecting via web browser uses a different web address.

As Ben Kolb mentioned we have the Sev1 critical outage case opened for 5 days and we worked with support 3 days on this issue, 2 with lower-level support and 1 with escalation engineer, no update since we worked with the escalation engineer. 3 Things we know, with Apple device you can launch desktops and applications via the gateway, on 13.1 49.13. Windows and Android clients fail. Previous version of code worked fine. No way based on the severity of the CVE rolling back is an option. Great URL for review -events/cybersecurity-advisories/aa23-201a

Like many people, I've been working from home of late, and I'm connecting from my Mac to a Windows machine at work over Microsoft Remote Desktop. I have most things working well (including using Keyboard Maestro to automate various things), but I have yet to figure out how to keep Command+Tab from invoking the macOS application switcher. Is it possible with Keyboard Maestro to intercept that keystroke and send it to the remote Windows session as Win+Tab? (Within the remote Windows session, Cmd on its own is interpreted as the Win key.)

I've got an Orbi AX4200 RBR750 with OpenVPN configured. I'm trying to use Microsoft Remote Desktop from a laptop over the VPN to a workstation. It all works fine when the laptop and workstation are on the local network, but when the laptop is remote the VPN connects successfully but Remote Desktop can't find the workstation.

I'm experiencing wonky behavior using a Mac to remote into a Windows 7 PC using Microsoft's Remote Desktop app for the Mac, and using a Magic Trackpad 2 as my primary input device. The problems arise primarily when scrolling in various applications in Windows. It appears the Magic Trackpad is flooding windows with scroll events, causing unpredictable behavior in many applications. Some scroll ok, others whip around or back and forth, or stutter uncontrollably. I probably need to find a way to "filter" out this flood of scroll events into something more manageable by Windows, but I am unaware of any existing apps or utilities to do so? Has anyone else experienced this issue and/or have any potential solutions to it?

On the Mac side, pay attention to the speed part in the trackpad settings. Here I suggest you bring it to the fastest. Also, in the remote (windows) machine, increase the line per speed from default 3 to 10 And again, on the windows side, set the mouse speed to the fastest in the additional options section.

I got a Mac Studio (Sonoma) couple of days earlier and for the last 2 days I am trying to connect to this machine using Microsoft remote desktop (MS RD) from my another Mac air ( Ventura) . Both the machines are in the same network for testing purpose. I did all the set up like having the latest version of MS RD downloaded, enabling the Remote Login, Remote Management and port forwarding in the SP router etc. I am able to ping this machine from the other laptop also I could use the ssh command to connect to this machine using the terminal. I can connect to this machine using VNC but not with MS RD. I tried everything I can. Any one could help or suggestions. FYI there is a reason I need to user MS RD else I could have used other apps including Apple Screen Share.

With this policy setting applied, users who log on to the local Windows console see an additional option on the Duo for Windows Logon prompt for remembering the device. This option will not display for RDP/remote logins to Windows systems with Duo Authentication for Windows Logon installed, regardless of the effective remembered devices policy setting for Windows Logon.

If you enabled User Elevation in Duo for Windows Logon v4.1.0 or later, you'll see the Duo authentication prompt after you enter your password for a credentialed elevation request. The application you were trying to launch runs after you approve the Duo two-factor request. If you chose to remember the device at the Windows desktop login, then you won't need to approve Duo authentication for UAC elevations made by the same logged-in account either until the trusted Duo session ends.

First, you need to configure your Windows computer for Remote Desktop access. When you configure Remote Desktop on your system, this computer acts as a "host" computer. You can then go to a "client" computer and access your desktop. For our purposes here, we'll assume you are at home (on the "client" computer) and wish to use your computer at work (the "host" computer), on the University of Iowa network.

Note: The host computer must be turned on and connected to the network or Internet to connect to it using Remote Desktop. If your computer is on the UI network, you can use PowerUp to save energy and turn off your computer, then turn your computer on remotely.

I'm trying to set up a Microsoft Remote Desktop connection (from the app store, not native RDP) between my desktop PC (Windows 11) and an NUC miniPC outside in my observatory (Windows 10 Pro). I am unable to make the connection. I can access files over the network so I know the computers can talk to each other, but I cannot get a remote desktop connection.

I'm not new to remote desktop. I use this same app to remote into my rig 1000 miles away in a remote facility. But I'm stumped with this. I have searched for hours for a solution but none of the common solutions have worked.

Anydesk has been my go to for a while. But a recent update limits the time logged in to 10min unless there is user activity. So every 10min I get kicked off. Not a huge deal but I find it annoying. The other reason is without going into detail I need to use Remote Desktop for my rig at the remote facility, so I just want to consolidate things and use one app.

One thing I've noticed, on the NUC at my remote facility I do not have a Microsoft account on that NUC but just a local account. On the NUC at home here I have used my Microsoft account to login. The other difference is that the remote facility NUC is on a VPN, while at home it is just on my local network.

I use tight VNC and it would not let me connect until I used the router to assign a permanent IP address to the remote computer and to my main computer in the house because every time the power went out or a computer would be turned off or on, it would have a new IP address assigned to it.

A week or so ago I updated Windows 10 Pro on the remote PC. Likely a mistake. I also upgraded to Windows 11 on my laptop. Then I couldn't connect via Remote Desktop. I got the error you outlined above.

I finally pulled out of my foggy memory the rdassistant app. Which then, as I said, requires you to be connected to the internet. Well because of these issues I don't want my remote computer to be connected to the internet. So I had to get the remote PC and hook it up to my home wireless router so I could run the rdassistant to get the required info. Why the IP address, etc changed because of this is crazy. ff782bc1db

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