TheAnyDesk license can be purchased directly through AnyDesk or one of our authorized resellers and is managed on the
my.anydesk.com management console. In this article, you can find the license that fits your use case.
AnyDesk offers a range of licenses that fit companies of all sizes and cover a variety use cases. A table detailing the differences between our licenses can be found on our website. With an AnyDesk license, users:
Jack is a self-employed architect who travels often for work. He mainly uses two devices for work: one laptop when he travels, and one desktop computer at his home base. When he travels, he uses AnyDesk on his laptop to make an outgoing connection to remotely access large files on his desktop back home.
AnyDesk STANDARD is the ideal license for small to medium-sized teams and businesses, from IT departments to managed service providers who want to use AnyDesk with a basic set of business features.
Company A has a team of 20 IT support staff that work in shifts. At any time of the day, only 5 IT support staff are working. Each of these 5 support staff make outgoing connections during their shift at the same time. As part of their company protocol, the IT support staff require these outgoing connections to be screen-recorded.
AnyDesk ADVANCED includes the full set of business features. The license is designed for medium-sized businesses and larger teams across all industries for which collaboration is key and multiple concurrent connections is a must.
During the work day, these 40 employees make outgoing connections to remote devices at the same time. These could include reasons such as the IT team providing tech support to clients or the Design team accessing high-functioning programmes on external devices.
In order to have a better overview of these outgoing connections made by the employees, the IT Director requires a management console to add or remove users, to assign permissions to each user, and to keep track of the remote software access usage within the company.
It appears that AnyDesk has become the new goto application for remote access and support. I downloaded a .deb file from
anydesk.com and tried installing it using Gdebi, but there was an error message saying something about dependencies. Eventually I managed to install it from the anydesk repositories using terminal commands that I found on
anydesk.com. Once installed, it ran without problems.
3.3 The customer is obliged to register the licence key in the portal or in the application within 14 days of receipt. ANYDESK reserves the right to restrict or block access to the services if the Customer fails to comply with the aforementioned.
The apps in the antiX repos are primarily aimed at use between antiX boxes and are configured for simplicity and security of use. After installing the in-house app, the underlying apps can still be used with other similar apps. In such cases you have to take care of configuration yourself.
Outline
You seem to be interested in VNC connections. For this antiX uses x11vnc to serve a remote desktop and SSVNC to view the remote desktop. They are two independent apps that work together very well but do not depend on each other. It is possible to run x11vnc server on an antiX box and view it using a VNC viewer of your choice running on a box from an entirely different distro or even on a Windows system. The opposite is also possible i.e. the Windows system runs a VNC server of your choice and an antiX box runs an SSVNC viewer.
I regularly use AnyDesk to access a machine running Zen with licenced modules, without issues. Just have to make sure you set it up to start remote access automatically from a white-listed user. I use that in combination with remote wake-on-LAN to process images when the station is available, usually late hours.
Hi,
I have no experience with RemoteApp and I read a lot about it but still have questions.
I have a DC Win2019std that has an ERP on it and right now people connect to their workstation using AnyDesk to open their ERP.
I would like to enable remoteapp and publish the ERP directly from the server.
Does the licensing (excluding the ERP licences) works like the RDS licence so that if I have 5 users RDP but replace them by 5 user remoteapps : I need 5 cals RDS? or since it is not the full RDS, the licenses are less expensive or even: not required?
And if I use the current server as an Hyper-V server and just create another one so that this VM is the one people connect to it: then it goes againts Microsoft best practice to have the hyper-V plain vanilla
I need to install either the DC and RDS roles on the same Windows Server 2019 server. I know it's not the best solution, but it's a lab environment. What is the best procedure and sequence to install both roles on the same server? Regards ...
Configure Remote App
Open Server Manager. Select Remote Desktop Services > Collections.
Select the collection needed to configure the application launcher.
In the RemoteApp Programs area, select Tasks select > Publish RemoteApp Programs.
Click Add on the Publish RemoteApp programs dialog.
This question maybe has no answer (for free license). I have consulted with the official Anydesk, and only the Anydesk professional and enterprise license can change the ID to Alias. Therefore the free version can not.See _ID_and_Alias
I did this on the second run of AnyDesk. I had original tried looking at the service.conf file though I saw nothing relating to the alias name. You are also not prompted on the first run to set the alias (AFAIK) under Ubuntu; even though the AnyDesk help page on the topic says you will be.
Depends of version that you have in your System, normally when you finish the installation, it present only one time, at the first runs, the interface with you can choice your alias, it check that alias is available and set it in both site, your system, and the remote servers configuration (anydesk servers)...If you dismiss the first run when you can choice the alias, you can purge from your system the anydesk installation, and try again... this operation set a new ID and you can choice the desired alias...
Just because this topic is in the active search so my experience might will helpful. So I cloned windows computer and any desk picked up old allies so I could not really access my first computer until the second one was on.
So how to actually to deal with it. There is cache file in user local and roaming folders. You need to delete the program itself and those files from user caches folders. Then if you run portable version again it will give you a number finally.
The Alias is stored in a token on the computer, according to the AnyDesk support portal. This is for security reasons. They chose not to put the Alias in a file anywhere, lest the location be spread around amongst hackers and those who spend their time creating malware. Should one of them, or their programs, ever gain access to your computer they could do any number of malicious things with it. So, to answer the original posters question, by design the Alias is kept on the computer in a token and cannot be accessed, altered, or modified by anyone.
However, you can manually rename other computers that show up in the "Recent Sessions" area on the "New Connections" window. This is done by clicking on the menu icon (3 vertical dots in lower right side of computer icon) and selecting "rename". Of course, you have to make an initial connection to another computer running AnyDesk first, to get it to show up in the "Recent Connections" area, after which you can rename it to anything you desire.
If you want to connect to a remote computer that is not on the same network as the computer you are accessing it from, you need to use the AnyDesk ID of the remote computer you'd like to connect to. After connecting, you can then rename the computer to anything you'd like in the "recent connections" area of the AnyDesk "New Connections" window on the computer you accessed it from.
After you've set the Alias, if you need to locate the AnyDesk ID for the computer then you can right-click the AnyDesk Icon in the system tray of the computer you want to get the ID for, select "settings", then in the left-pane of the window that appears highlight "User interface", and in the right-pane check "Show AnyDesk ID instead of Alias". When you click the "New Connection" tab at the top of the window, Under "This Desk" the AnyDesk ID will now appear.
If you want set up "unattended access" to connect to a computer without anyone having to be present at the other computer, you need to set up a password on the machine you intend to access when you install AnyDesk on it. You can do this from the Welcome Screen by clicking the "set password" icon, or from the "settings" screen by clicking on "Security" on the left pane, then checking "Enable unattended access" on the right pane and clicking the "Set password for unattended access" button.
One last thing - if you can't connect to a computer that has AnyDesk installed on it, and a message appears saying "session closed" after timing out with error code win32_10060, a complete uninstall of AnyDesk needs to be done on the machine you can't connect to using a program like Revo Uninstaller or IOBit Uninstaller, then reinstall AnyDesk and set up the configuration again. Everything should work properly after that.
AnyDesk, softver iz porodice Remote Desktop softvera, osigurava pouzdane veze s udaljenim radnim površinama za IT stručnjake i pojedince u pokretu. Remote desktop softveri se mogu koristiti za daljinsku podršku, onlajn saradnju kao i daljinski rad (hibridni rad od kuće). AnyDesk je veoma lak za upotrebu, čak i za početnike. Interfejs je jednostavan i intuitivan, ali iza te svedenosti krije se pregršt dobro osmišljenih naprednih funkcija. Ovaj softver je tehnološki i bezbednosno na veoma visokom nivou, sa mnoštvom korisnih funkcija (poput cloud adresara) koje IT inženjeri ali i kućni korisnici mogu uspešno primeniti kako bi sebi olakšali pristup udaljenom računaru kojim upravljaju.
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