Hello,
Thank you for your message.
After upgrading, now when I connect to a desktop for remote sharing, the remote user who is logged in via rdp gets disconnected and I get the full control.
Unfortunately, this is expected behavior caused by the way the RDP client is configured on the desktop OSs (such as Windows 10 and 11). Please note that Windows 10 (due to being a desktop and not a server OS) does not allow to run a console (i.e. local) session and RDP or even two RDP sessions simultaneously - this is only possible with server OSs if the terminal server is set up (i.e. if there's an active RDP session on the remote machine, connecting to the machine in a Full Control/View Only connection mode will log out the existing RDP session).
After ready the forum, what I want is shadowing to see the screen in the 1 user license,
it was working while i was using the free license, what do i need to enable the shadowing, even with the power control the remote user gets disconnected.
Unfortunately, "shadowing" via RDP when used on a desktop OS is not possible - Microsoft only allows one simultaneous RDP connection for desktop systems. Attempting to start a second RDP session will prompt the user to end the active session. In addition, if the user is working at the computer console (locally), their local session is disconnected (locked) when a remote RDP connection is made. The remote RDP session will also be terminated if the user logs into Windows from the computer’s console (therefore, connecting in Full Control connection mode leads to RDP session being terminated).
The number of concurrent RDP connections on Windows is actually a license limitation from Microsoft side - they prohibit the creation of a workstation-based Terminal RDP server for multiple users to work simultaneously and suggest purchasing Windows Server instead which allows two simultaneous RDP connections by default.
Here are some of the options that might work for your purpose of shadowing the remote user:
1. You and the remote user can both connect to Host on the target remote machine using
Full Control and View connection mode - you can both switch between Full Control and View Only depending on the requirements. However, please note that you need a 2-tech license for this purpose to allow simultaneous connection.
2. A remote user can install Host or run
Agent on their own local machine that they use to connect to the target remote computer via RDP. You can also do so vice versa and use Host/Agent on your own local machine allowing a remote user to connect (you can restrict them to View Only mode in the
Host Settings -> Modes if you prefer).
Hope that helps.