The Azure Virtual Desktop Store app for Windows is currently in PREVIEW.See the Supplemental Terms of Use for Microsoft Azure Previews for legal terms that apply to Azure features that are in beta, preview, or otherwise not yet released into general availability.
The Microsoft Remote Desktop client is used to connect to Azure Virtual Desktop to access your desktops and applications. This article shows you how to connect to Azure Virtual Desktop with the Remote Desktop client for Windows, which only allows you to subscribe to a feed made available to you by your organization administrators.
You can also connect to Azure Virtual Desktop with Windows App, a single app to securely connect you to Windows devices and apps from Azure Virtual Desktop, Windows 365, Microsoft Dev Box, Remote Desktop Services, and remote PCs. For more information, see What is Windows App?
Here's how to install the Remote Desktop client for Windows using the MSI installer. If you want to deploy the Remote Desktop client in an enterprise, you can use msiexec from the command line to install the MSI file. For more information, see Enterprise deployment.
If you left the box for Launch Remote Desktop when setup exits selected, the Remote Desktop client will automatically open. Alternatively to launch the client after installation, use the Start menu to search for and select Remote Desktop.
If you have the Remote Desktop client (MSI) and the Azure Virtual Desktop app from the Microsoft Store installed on the same device, you may see the message that begins A version of this application called Azure Virtual Desktop was installed from the Microsoft Store. Both apps are supported, and you have the option to choose Continue anyway, however it could be confusing to use the same remote resource across both apps. We recommend using only one version of the app at a time.
If you have the Azure Virtual Desktop app from the Microsoft Store and the Remote Desktop client (MSI) installed on the same device, you may see the message that begins A version of this application called Azure Virtual Desktop was installed from the Microsoft Store. Both apps are supported, and you have the option to choose Continue anyway, however it could be confusing to use the same remote resource across both apps. We recommend using only one version of the app at a time.
A workspace combines all the desktops and applications that have been made available to you by your admin. To be able to see these in the Remote Desktop client, you need to subscribe to the workspace by following these steps:
If you selected Subscribe, sign in with your user account when prompted, for example us...@contoso.com. After a few seconds, your workspaces should show the desktops and applications that have been made available to you by your admin.
If you see the message No workspace is associated with this email address, your admin might not have set up email discovery, or you are using an Azure environment that is not Azure cloud, such as Azure for US Government. Try the steps to Subscribe with URL instead.
If you selected Subscribe with URL, in the Email or Workspace URL box, enter the relevant URL from the following table. After a few seconds, the message We found Workspaces at the following URLs should be displayed.
Once you've subscribed to a workspace, its content will update automatically regularly and each time you start the client. Resources may be added, changed, or removed based on changes made by your admin.
A workspace combines all the desktops and applications that have been made available to you by your admin. To be able to see these in the Azure Virtual Desktop app, you need to subscribe to the workspace by following these steps:
A workspace combines all the desktops and applications that have been made available to you by your admin. To be able to see these in the Remote Desktop app, you need to subscribe to the workspace by following these steps:
In the Email or Workspace URL box, either enter your user account, for example us...@contoso.com, or the relevant URL from the following table. After a few seconds, the message We found Workspaces at the following URLs should be displayed.
If you see the message We couldn't find any Workspaces associated with this email address. Try providing a URL instead, your admin might not have set up email discovery. Use one of the following workspace URLs instead.
Double-click one of the icons to launch a session to Azure Virtual Desktop. You may be prompted to enter the password for your user account again, depending on how your admin has configured Azure Virtual Desktop.
Select one of the icons to launch a session to Azure Virtual Desktop. You may be prompted to enter the password for your user account again, depending on how your admin has configured Azure Virtual Desktop.
If you want to help us test new builds before they're released, you should download our Insider releases. Organizations can use the Insider releases to validate new versions for their users before they're generally available. For more information, see Enable Insider releases.
hi thre, can anybody tell me how I enable apple remote desktop on an orbi ? I see in my remote desktop window (apple software) that for screen sharing port 5900 is greyed out, and remote management 3283 is greyed out. Both macs are running latest Mojave, different networks. Can anybody talk me through the steps to enable this so it works? Im not really familiar with port forwarding so as much detail as possible would be really helpful thanks.
There are two ports involved. The one used for the target computer which is the 3389 you mentioned here. The other one is the port that the outside computer will use which can be either the same as the one used by the target computer, or -for better security- a different one.
This makes me believe there is something either with the Windows 10 Machine that needs configuring or the Router's port forwarding that needs adjusting. I have been methodically checking all of these settings - and have found no anomaly as of yet. And, as I have said, I've been using these two computers to connect when outside the network for years (usually, when I travel for business).
Anyway, the only thing I can think of is that maybe Norton needs to know the port I am using to connect - but, that doesn't really explain why I still cannot connect when I disable Norton's smart firewall.
Learn more about customizing Device Trust
To secure your device from other devices, you can specify an appropriate trust level to the devices that are connected to your network. The trust level of a device depends on the trust level of its network. When you change the trust level of a network, Norton assigns the same trust level to all the devices that are connected to that network. However, you can change the trust level of individual devices using the Device Trust option. You can use the Configure option to change the trust level of other devices on your network.
That seems like it is for devices on the same network. I'm outside of the network (sitting in a hotel room) using random IP address attempting to connect to my remote machine (Computer A). For many, many, years I had zero issues connecting in this way - up until yesterday when I installed Norton.
This (link below) seems like a different case - This person is already able to log into his or her machine - but desires to narrow the scope of who can log in (limit access to one machine and one IP). I can't log in at all from outside the network.
I've been repeatedly checking my Windows machine settings, my router settings, and my laptop settings - everything looks good. And, really, since I have been connecting the same two machines together for years - nothing should have changed with regards to settings on Windows, my router, or laptop. And, if I'm on the same network I can Remote desktop to the machine.
That's not really true, there are windows updates etc. Happens many times that an error coincides with install of a program but its not the cause: To find the error I would delete Norton and see if the problem persists, if it does, its not Norton. If its solved it is Norton. Then take it from there.
"That's not really true, there are windows updates etc. Happens many times that an error coincides with install of a program but its not the cause: To find the error I would delete Norton and see if the problem persists, if it does, its not Norton. If its solved it is Norton. Then take it from there."
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