Remote Desktop and Desktop Shortcuts
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@garak0410 said:
The common thing I see is that they usually have different kinds of screen resolution between the desktop here and their home PC.
That is the problem and I have no idea if Windows has any method to change the behavior because that is the design. It is done to ensure that nothing is outside the visible area.
You can mitigate that by learning the minimum resolution that they normally use and making sure everything is within that boundary on their desktop. If there is nothing out beyond the incoming resolution, it will not change anything (generally).
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I always have the same issue with remote sessions.
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It's not uncommon. The screen resolutions is one, or like Dennis said, the multiple screens. Have you tried a remote tool like Teamviewer or LogMeIn? These won't have the same issues, as they handle things different than RDP.
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In a way I am glad I am not the only one who had this problem. On the flip side, it doesn't mess up Windows 8.1 start screen. I will look into Fences...
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@garak0410 said:
In a way I am glad I am not the only one who had this problem. On the flip side, it doesn't mess up Windows 8.1 start screen. I will look into Fences...
It never messed up the start button. It affects Windows 8+ the same as it has affected everything since NT4. Start is stable, desktop is not.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@garak0410 said:
In a way I am glad I am not the only one who had this problem. On the flip side, it doesn't mess up Windows 8.1 start screen. I will look into Fences...
It never messed up the start button. It affects Windows 8+ the same as it has affected everything since NT4. Start is stable, desktop is not.
Yup. Pretty much.
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This has always gotten me too. A huge pain about RDP
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If you need the screen resolution set the same as the local computer, assuming both monitors can handle the same resolution, use the manual settings in RDP.
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That works if you have have the real estate to spare and know what the other monitor has ahead of time.
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Just make sure that, when you make that change, you save the RDP file after and put it on the desktop.
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@scottalanmiller said:
That works if you have have the real estate to spare and know what the other monitor has ahead of time.
It's an option though. As long as the destination display is equal to or less than the viewing display, he's fine. It's not perfect but it's an option.
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If they can pin the shortcuts to their taskbar instead of desktop, it won't be an issue anymore.
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@alexntg said:
If they can pin the shortcuts to their taskbar instead of desktop, it won't be an issue anymore.
If you only saw the way people use shortcuts here...it will make your head hurt...me?? I am one of just a few on Windows 8.1 and I have mine categorized on my start screen...I actually make use of the "controversial" "Modern" screen...
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We actually have a policy that IT does not help people with shortcuts. If you really need a short cut it's between you and your manager, otherwise we deploy needed internet favorites via GPO, and the rest of the applications are in the start menu(start screen).
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@Dashrender said:
We actually have a policy that IT does not help people with shortcuts. If you really need a short cut it's between you and your manager, otherwise we deploy needed internet favorites via GPO, and the rest of the applications are in the start menu(start screen).
That must make file server moves a breeze!
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@alexntg said:
@Dashrender said:
We actually have a policy that IT does not help people with shortcuts. If you really need a short cut it's between you and your manager, otherwise we deploy needed internet favorites via GPO, and the rest of the applications are in the start menu(start screen).
That must make file server moves a breeze!
Standard network drives, yes - user directories, not so much.