Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Fresh RDP List 2016 -free vpn

 

Free RDP List Here

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IP:205.213.74.5
User Name:Scanner
Password:Scannerx
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IP:24.204.49.48
User Name:copier
Password:copier
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IP:24.144.152.31

User Name:sheri
Password:Password1
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IP:208.180.109.224
User Name:register
Password:register
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IP:146.145.57.39
User Name:home
Password:home123
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IP:82.213.142.220
User Name:server 
Password:123456789
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IP:50.20.38.130
User Name:catalog
Password:catalog
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IP:97.67.251.50
User Name: intern
Password:interng 
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IP:92.112.245.7
User Name:buh1
Password:1234g
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IP:202.57.10.83
User Name:administrator
Password:Passw0rd
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IP:111.93.187.138
User Name:office
Password:office
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:50.244.8.59
User Name:purchasing
Password:purchasing
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IP:222.75.151.182
User Name:user2
Password:123
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IP:111.93.187.138
User Name:office
Password:office
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IP:78.186.137.70
User Name:user2
Password:123123
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IP:88.249.217.12
User Name:user2
Password:1234567
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IP:120.150.17.9
User Name:manager
Password:password1
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IP:189.72.225.226
User Name:pedro
Password:123
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IP:24.187.204.66
User Name:remote3
Password:password
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:208.57.150.100
User Name:trans
Password:trans
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IP:216.178.82.42
User Name:contract
Password:contract
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:50.242.13.225
User Name:copier
Password:copier
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:74.95.204.3
User Name:conference
Password:conference
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:69.198.89.220
User Name:warehouse
Password:warehouse
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IP:213.8.78.42
User Name:office
Password:1234
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:98.174.82.209
User Name:xerox
Password:xerox
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IP:74.218.47.83
User Name:room
Password:room
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IP:208.180.89.58
User Name:warehouse
Password:warehouse
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IP:71.251.156.3
User Name:parts
Password:parts
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:108.225.40.226
User Name:staff
Password:staff
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:201.73.232.58
User Name: teste
Password: teste
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:66.184.249.60
User Name:owner
Password:owner
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:82.213.142.220
User Name:server
Password:123456789
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:50.20.38.130
User Name:catalog
Password:catalog
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:97.67.251.50
User Name:intern
Password:interng
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:12.219.216.11
User Name:parts
Password:shipping
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IP:24.199.63.234
User Name: miguel
Password:password
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IP
User Name
Password
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IP:209.226.46.138
User Name:remote
Password:p@ssword
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IP:71.40.249.98
User Name:sales2
Password:sales2
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IP:96.56.133.204
User Name:station4
Password:123456
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IP:75.151.70.225
User Name: spiceworks
Password: spiceworks
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IP:208.72.150.210
User Name:tech
Password:tech
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Thursday, September 22, 2016

Five Best Remote Desktop Tools - free-rdp-2016




Five Best Remote Desktop Tools

Managing your own computer from afar or troubleshooting a family member's PC without being in front of it is much easier when you have a good remote desktop utility to rely on. This week we're going to look at five of the best remote desktop and management tools, based on your nominations.

We've talked about remotely controlling your PC from anywhere and troubleshooting other people's PCs, now it's time to have your say. It's been a while since we looked at remote desktop tools, and now that one of our favorites, LogMeIn, is killing its free service, we thought it was time to take a fresh look at the field and see what's turned up.



While LogMeIn is a fine product, the fact is there are other utilities out there that offer the same—or better—features to users for free, and you came through with tons of options. Here are the five you recommended the most, in no particular order:



The polls are closed and the votes are counted! To see which of these great remote desktop tools earned the top spot as the Lifehacker community favorite, head over to our Hive Five followup post to check out the details!

Teamviewer

Teamviewer supports Windows, OS X, Linux, Android, and iOS, and is free for personal use. It's probably the most obvious alternative to LogMeIn, and the most popular contender from the nominations thread. Not only does Teamviewer offer remote support and remote management—as in you don't necessarily have to have the remote side set up before you need to connect—it also sports useful features like wake-on-LAN to wake up a sleeping computer and put it back to sleep when you're finished, file transfer capabilities, clipboard passthrough, support for connecting from mobile devices like phones or tablets, and more. Teamviewer even supports online meetings and collaboration, so multiple people can connect to one host or share a session if they need to. 


The beauty of Teamviewer is that all of the features I mentioned are free, setup is incredibly easy, and the app actually has more features built-in to it than you'll probably ever really need. Those of you who nominated it praised its ability to manage multiple systems from one computer without having to remember them, the fact that Teamviewer works well without you having to make a ton of firewall modifications or do port forwarding, their support for two-step authentication, and more. Read more in the nomination thread here. 

 

Splashtop
Splashtop supports Windows, OS X, Linux, Android, and iOS, and is free for personal use (up to five computers, and depending on how you use it). It's perhaps most notable as a tool that allows you to stream audio and video across computers with minimal latency, so if you love watching movies on your tablet that are stored on your desktop but don't want to deal with apps or compatibility issues, Splashtop is a great tool. It's not limited to that these days though—You can use the applications on your remote device like you were sitting right there, manage files without transferring them first in their own native applications, and more. 

The only downside to Splashtop free is that it starts to get pricey when you really need remote access. $2/month will get you the ability to access your home computers off network, which is arguably the biggest draw of a remote access tool—so you can actually access your PC when you're away, or a friend or family member's PC without going to their house. It does require a little setup on the client side before you can connect too, but if your goal is to enjoy media remotely and do some light troubleshooting, it's worth a look. Check out its nomination thread here.




Chrome Remote Desktop supports Windows and OS X (and Linux, sort of), and is completely free for personal and commercial use. It's essentially just a Chrome app that you have to install in Chrome on any computer you want to connect to. You'll have to be logged in to Chrome on any computer you want to connect to as well, which is a bit of a bummer, but the great thing is that it runs in your browser, is super-easy to set up, and it's remarkably fast. It's not packed with additional features, but if all you need is to do some quick, cross-platform troubleshooting or access some files remotely, it's fast and free, and uses a web browser you probably already have installed. The video above from Tekzilla shows you how it works.

It's not perfect—Chrome Remote Desktop has no mobile apps or support at all (although the word is it's coming soon), has some trouble with multiple displays, and it's pretty featureless when it comes to things like wake-on-LAN, file transfer, streaming, and other support tools, but what you trade in heft you get back in simplicity and ease-of-use, which is exactly what those of you who nominated it praised it for. Check out the nominations thread here.

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Top 3 Free Remote Desktop Connections Manager - best rdp client 2016


Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP), developed originally by Microsoft, is a network protocol that provides a way for people to get access to a computer remotely with a nice lightweight user interface along with input devices like keyboard and mouse. Both Windows 7 and 8 come with a native Remote Desktop Client that lets you connect to the remote machine through this protocol. However, for people who constantly need to manage multiple machines at once, you will need a program that manages multiple connections for you to make your life easier. And here are 3 of them that are free and great for you to consider.

Remote Desktop Manager

Remote Desktop Manager - Dashboard
It’s a feature-rich remote connections manager that manages not only multiple remote desktop connections but many other protocols as well, such as VNC, Citrix, HTTP, FTP, LogMeIn, TeamViewer, Putty, etc.. You can save credentials locally in the database, which is protected by the AES encryption, or in the external applications like LastPass or KeePass, or on their new released Remote Desktop Manager Online.
What’s good about this tool is that it also supports and integrates pretty well with many popular services as well. Such as:
  • Intel AMT support – to allow remote console asset access even when the computers are off.
  • Hyper-V dashboard – to manager hyper-v powered VMs.
  • Windows PowerShell support
  • Advanced Data Source support, including Amazon S3, Dropbox, FTP, SQL Server, etc..
  • Integrated password manager
  • Microsoft Azure Console
  • Many VPN connections
  • etc..
If you are looking for one that is not only managing remote desktop connections but also many other things, this Remote Desktop Manager could be your answer. The Standard edition is FREE, and according to this comparison sheet, it could just be good enough for most of your IT tasks.
Please also check out our full review of the product here.

Terminals

Terminals
Terminals is another feature rich, tab-based remote desktop clients manager that uses Terminal Services Active Client (mstscax.dll). Other than RDP connections, Terminals can also manage most of other popular connections as well, such as VNC, Console, SSH, VRRC, Citrix, RAS, HTTP, etc.. As a bonus, it also handles a variety of networking operations like Ping, Trace Route, WMI Explorer, TCP Connections, DNS Lookup, Time Sync, etc..
Terminals is an open source project that has been quite actively maintained and developed for a number of years. It’s on stable version 2 and can be running on Windows XP, Windows 7, and Windows 8. Both 32-bit and 64-bit editions are supported.

Remote Desktop Connection Manager

Remote desktop connection manager
Microsoft itself also offers a manager tool called Remote Desktop Connection Manager 2.7 (RDCMan) that helps you manage multiple remote desktop connections. It’s similar to Windows Servers’ built-in MMC Remote Desktop Snap-in but more flexible.
It works on Windows 7, and server version from 2003 and up. For Windows XP, you will need the latest version of RDP client in order to use it.

/update on Nov. 24, 2014/

The RDCMan 2.7, released on Nov. 11, 2014, is a major feature release. New features include – Virtual machine connect-to-console support – Smart groups – Support for credential encryption with certificates – Windows 8 remote action support – Support for Windows 8, Windows 8.1 / Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2012 R2

MultiDesk

MultiDesk
MultiDesk is another simple tab-based remote desktop manager that only manages multiple RDP connections for you. All connections can be managed through a server/group folder structure. It’s free and portable. all configurations and connections are saved in the save folder in an XML file. Since it’s portable, you can easily carry it with you so you can get access to it with all the same information.
We actually have reviewed this tool before. Check it out if you want to know more.
That actually made the no. 4 tools I covered here, instead of 3 I intended, but I guess you wouldn’t mind knowing one more option.

RD Tabs

RD Tabs is another tab-based remote desktop manager that not only put Remote Desktop sessions to the tab but also provides extra features such as favorites with advanced editing, command line scripting, connection thumbnails, encrypted passwords, detached connection windows, remote desktop screen capture, remote terminal server information/management, RDP 6.0 support, etc. As one of our lovely commenters, Samuel Davis, states, it’s simple as hell.
Remote Desktop Manager - RD Tabs

/update on Nov. 28, 2014/

2 new additions were mentioned by one of our visitors, mRemoteNG, and 2x Clients. Since they both look pretty good, we are adding them to the list here as below.

mRemoteNG

mRemoteNG is a fork of mRemote, an open source, tabbed, multi-protocol, remote connections manager. It supports not only RDP protocols but also some of the other popular ones as well, including VNC, ICA, SSH, Telnet, etc. It’s a simple program to use and manage all your remote desktop connections from a central location.
mRemoteNG - confCons.xml - 2014-11-28 10_38_26

2x Client

I actually have been using 2x Client for quite a while, not on my main Windows desktop but on my mobile smartphones. I don’t feel its Windows Client offering more compelling features than the ones I mentioned above, but they do have a wide range coverage on other platforms, Linux, Mac, iOS, Android, Windows Phone, and Chrome App. They even have versions for Windows Embedded Systems.
So if you are looking for one mainly used not on Windows Desktop platform, 2x Client might be the one to go. The user experience on 2x Client is better than Microsoft’s own RDP client on both iOS, Android, and Windows Phones.

Verdict

I personally have used Terminals for years and absolutely like it. It’s rock solid and has everything I wanted. However, the Remote Desktop Manager looks so promising and so powerful. It can be your powerful weapon to cover all your needs within one consolidated environment.
That doesn’t mean you should overlook the other tools we mentioned in this post. Both Microsoft RDCMan and MultiDesk are simple and just work. If you are the guy who doesn’t always fall in love with an all-in-one kind of tool. These two are probably your answer. Besides, if managing Windows Servers via RDP is all you needed, why you need a tool with a bunch of features you will never use?
As for managing a bunch of connections on a mobile platform, 2x Client is definitely the way to go.

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Download Remote Desktop Manager 11.7.2.0 / 2.7.1.0 Free

Remote Desktop Manager 11.7.2.0 / 2.7.1.0 Free




Turn on Remote Desktop in Windows 7, 8, 10, or Vista - RDP 2016

Turn on Remote Desktop in Windows 7, 8, 10, or Vista

Remote Desktop is disabled by default in Windows, but it’s easy enough to turn it back on. If you need to access your Windows PC from another box, it’s an essential thing to turn on.
This should work for the Professional versions of Windows 10, 8, 8.1, 7, or Vista.


Important note: Remote desktop is only included in the Professional, Business, or Ultimate versions of Windows. Home editions do not have remote desktop.

Getting to the Remote Desktop Settings in Windows 8, 8.1, or 10

How to use Remote Desktop ? - RDP 2016

How to use Remote Desktop??







Use Remote Desktop on your Windows, Android, or iOS device to connect to a PC from afar:

  1. Set up the remote PC so it will allow remote connections. See How do I connect to another PC with Remote Desktop connection?
  2. On the remote PC, open Settings and go to System > About. Note the PC name. You'll need this later.
  3. Next, in Settings, go to System > Power & sleep and check to make sure Sleep is set to Never.
  4. Enter the full name of the remote PC into Remote Desktop Connection on your local PC. For detailed steps, see Connect to another computer using Remote Desktop Connection.