Archive for the 'remote desktop services' Tag

The free Remote Desktop Manager allows you to manage all your remote connections: Microsoft Remote Desktop, Terminal Services, VNC, LogMeIn and Team Viewer, Ftp, SSH, Telnet, VPN and more.

The free version of Remote Desktop Manager is already in the list of free Windows admin tools since 2009. Version 6.0 has been released recently with quite a few new interesting features. Of course, Remote Desktop Manager is fully compatible with Windows 7.

Submitted by David Hervieux

Remote Desktop Manager is a small application used to manage all your remote connections and virtual machines. Add, edit, delete, share, organize and find your remote connection quickly.

Remote Desktop Manager for Windows 7

The Standard edition of Remote Desktop Manager is free for personal and commercial usage. Here is a list of all features available in this version:

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MremoteNG is a free, tabbed remote connection manager that supports RDP, VNC, ICA, SSH, Telnet, HTTP/HTTPS, and rlogin.

I’m particularly fond of the saying “A good sysadmin is one which never has to get out of his/her chair” and mRemoteNG is one of those tools that goes a long way in accomplishing that goal. This application acts a tabbed remote connection manager and credentials vault for a variety of connection protocols that include:

  • RDP
  • VNC
  • ICA
  • SSH
  • Telnet
  • HTTP/HTTPS
  • rlogin

Remote Connection Manager - mRmoteNG

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Submitted by William Campbell

Royal TS is a free RDP manager that does its job very well. It allows you to centrally manage and access all of your RDP connections from a single “console”. You can categorize your connections with folders and manage them in whatever order makes sense to you. It’s lightweight but very flexible and allows you to have RDP sessions as embedded windows or external/full screen.

Royal TS - Free RDP manager

The free RDP manager allows you to create a template with settings that can be applied to all future connections. If you have multiple people using RDP, you can get session information at a glance to see if someone is currently using a connection or if a session has been abandoned.

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Remote Desktop Connection Manager (RDCMan) is a free RDP client tool from Microsoft that allows you to manage multiple RDP sessions. If you often have to open multiple RDP connections simultaneously, you will especially like Remote Desktop Connection Manager.

Remote Desktop Connection Manager Group

RDCMan’s navigation pane on the left-hand side shows your servers and the groups you defined. The client area on the right-hand side displays either thumbnails of a group or the RDP session of a specific server.

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I promise, this will be my last article about Microsoft VDI for a while. During my research for the Microsoft VDI series, I stumbled across quite a few interesting articles about the topic which I want to share. If you want to dig deeper, you will find additional valuable information.

Microsoft Desktop Virtualization

Microsoft Virtualization Product Portfolio

This page is link list from Microsoft about their virtualization products, quite a few white papers and other resources.

What’s New in Remote Desktop Services

This TechNet article gives detailed overview of the changes in Remote Desktop Services (formerly Terminal Services).

Operating system virtualization

Microsoft product homepage for desktop virtualization

Microsoft Accelerates Desktop Virtualization

The press release that caused the stir about VDI recently.

Competitive Comparison Between Microsoft and VMware Desktop Virtualization (PDF)

This paper is mostly about Microsoft’s desktop virtualization solutions and says only little about VMware.

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Jeff is an IT Pro Evangelist with Microsoft Australia, based in Sydney. In this interview he explains how Microsoft’s virtualization solutions integrate and how multiple solutions can be brought to bear to assist IT professionals manage their environments, mitigate compatibility issues and accelerate deployments.

Jeff’s blog can be found here.

Jeff Alexander

JB: The large range of virtualization options available to customers means that there’s pretty much a solution to fit every usage scenario.

JA: There’s certainly been a lot of confusion in the local market with businesses and IT pros, simply because Microsoft has so much happening in the virtualization space, and sometimes it’s not clear how it all fits together. That’s why May 2010 is Virtualization Month for Microsoft Australia, where we’re running lots of Live Meetings to give IT pros a comprehensive overview of the key solutions. We’re following that up with free virtualization workshops across Australia throughout June.

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Michael is a Senior Technical Product Manager for VDI and Remote Desktop Services with Microsoft, based in Redmond. In this interview he discusses the advantages which RemoteFX will bring to Microsoft’s RDS and VDI solutions and compares the two technologies, looking at their relative advantages and disadvantages and what benefits they bring to business, while clearing up some common misunderstandings about VDI.

Michael Kleef

Michael’s blog can be found here.

JB: There’s been a quite consistent look and feel about Microsoft’s remote desktop/VDI technology to date, which has meant that the user is generally aware that they’re not using locally-installed software. The latest advances in the remote application user experience now seems to be at a point where the distinction between local and remote clients is blurring to the point of disappearing

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In the last post of my VDI series, I discussed the Microsoft’s VDI licensing. Since VDI is licensed per year, it will get more expensive than traditional desktop licensing in the long run. However, we all know that licensing costs are more or less negligible when it comes to calculating the TCO (Total Costs of Ownership).

People often think that desktop virtualization, like server virtualization, is a way to reduce costs in IT. I think, this is a misunderstanding, which I will try to clear up in this post. I will also say a few words about the so-called Microsoft VDI tax debate.

VDI hardware costs

The typical thin client argument that your client hardware can be less powerful and, therefore, cheaper doesn’t count when it comes to VDI because you need expensive additional server hardware for VDI. Obviously, your server infrastructure needs a lot more horsepower than with session virtualization (Terminal Server) because each user runs a virtual machine with a full-blown operating system on the server.

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Now, as you know more about Microsoft’s VDI products and technology, I will tell you a little about Microsoft’s VDI licensing. I will explain the old VECD licensing and the new VDA licensing. The question of whether you can reduce costs with VDI will be the topic of my next post.

The most interesting part of Microsoft’s recent announcements about desktop virtualization were the changes regarding VDI licensing.

VECD licensing

At the moment, you need the Virtual Enterprise Centralized Desktop (VECD) license if you run Windows desktops in a VDI environment. VECD licensing applies not only to Microsoft products but also to third-party VDI solutions such as VMware View or Citrix XenDesktop.

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In the last post of my series about Microsoft VDI I discussed the VDI software that Microsoft already offers today. In this article, I will give a short overview of two new technologies that might turn out to be vital for the adoption of VDI in Microsoft environments: RemoteFX and Dynamic Memory for Hyper-V.

RemoteFX

RemoteFX is a technology that Microsoft acquired two years ago with Calista Technologies. It is an enhancement of RDS (Remote Desktop Services) that will be delivered with Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 (no official release date yet, probably not earlier than Q4 2010). Essentially, RemoteFX will offer support for the following technologies in a Remote Desktop environment (session host and VDI):

  • Windows Aero
  • Full-motion video
  • Silverlight animations
  • 3D applications

Obviously RemoteFX could be essential for VDI because one of the major drawbacks of desktop virtualization is that the user experience of Remote Desktop is usually worse than on local PCs when it comes to graphics virtualization.

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In the last post in this VDI series I outlined Microsoft’s Remote Desktop Virtualization terminology. Today I will give an overview of Microsoft’s three VDI (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure) solutions.

Get Microsoft Silverlight

Microsoft “In-Box” VDI

With In-Box VDI Microsoft refers to the VDI technology that is delivered with Windows Server 2008 R2. I have already introduced some of the In-Box VDI components in my previous article:

  • Windows Server 2008 R2 with Hyper-V 2.0
  • RD Virtualization Host: Supports personal virtual desktops (PVD, each virtual machine has its own OS image) and virtual desktop pools (users/virtual machines share one OS image)
  • RD Connection Broker: Supports load balancing and reconnection to existing sessions
  • RD Gateway: Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) over HTTPS (SSL)
  • Remote Desktop Web Access: Users access their virtual desktops through a web page

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Microsoft recently made a few announcements that made many believe that desktop virtualization is now ready for prime time. I suppose many Windows admins have not yet bothered with desktop virtualization despite the buzz about Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) in the media lately. With Windows Server 2008 R2 Microsoft finally entered the VDI market, so it can’t hurt to inform yourself about the topic even if you have no plans to introduce VDI at this time.

Remote_Desktop_Services

In a series of articles I will give an overview of all the essential concepts of Microsoft’s VDI products. In this first post, I will introduce Microsoft key terms with regard to desktop virtualization. You have to know these terms in order to be able to follow the next articles in this series.

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Submitted by Yehuda Cohen – Blog: http://yehudac.blogspot.com Are you working with multiple Terminal Servers? Did you ever have to delete old user profiles on multiple servers? If your answer is YES to both questions, then TsProfileCleaner is designed for you.

TsProfileCleaner

The easy-to-use tool allows you to delete a particular user profile on multiple servers. You just have to add the Terminal Servers to the host list, select the servers and then enter the name of the user profile you want to delete.

TsProfileCleaner 1.0

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Submitted by Dan Shappir – Blog: Ericom Guy

This is an add-on product for Windows Server 2008 Terminal Services. It extends Windows Server 2008 Terminal Services with features such as:

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Submitted by Patrick Klages

A great tool to replace mstsc. It allows me to have several servers up and accessable at noe time and easily move btw them.

Publisher’s description:

Terminals is a multi tab terminal services/remote desktop client. It uses Terminal Services ActiveX Client (mstscax.dll). The project started from the need of controlling multiple connection simultaneously.

General Networking Tools added: Ping, Trace Route, WMI Explorer, TCP Connections, Network Interfaces, Whois, DNS Lookups, CPU History Graph, Shares List, Time Syncronization, Servers List

Terminals

Michaels’s note: Please check out this comparison of six free terminal services tools.

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