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Windows remote desktop client
Windows remote desktop client






windows remote desktop client

windows remote desktop client

Looks like users can go either way, and work with either remote desktop access tool. This removed my long-standing objections to the RDApp, and my equally long-standing preference for the older RDC application. Today, when I tried a classic text cut-n-paste inside RDapp on my Lenovo X380 Yoga test machine from Notepad, Explorer, Everything, and other apps, text cut-n-paste worked perfectly. This also worked fine in RDC, but not in RDapp.

windows remote desktop client

One couldn’t use CTRL-C on the target PC (cut or copy) and CTRL-V on the host PC (paste) to grab text from the target PC and then paste that text into an application running on the host PC desktop.

#Windows remote desktop client windows 10#

This still doesn’t work right (I just tried it), but Snip & Sketch is not subject to that limitation.Įarlier versions of Windows 10 also had problems with the clipboard/paste buffer. I’ve gotten in the habit of using RDC because back before Snip & Sketch became the recommended native screen-grab tool in Windows 10, its Snipping Tool predecessor couldn’t gab evanescent screen info - such as Start menu contents, for example - from the target PC desktop inside RDApp. Both applications are nearly identical and use the same underlying Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) to do their respective things. By process of elimination, that means RDApp is the Remote Desktop app whose menu icon appears at the right in that same graphic. RDC is, of course, the Remote Desktop Connection application start-up window shown at the left on the lead-in graphic for this story.








Windows remote desktop client