![]() Here are some of the things we are working on right now: We have not forgotten about other requests, we are only releasing what is ready right now. A beta for the Enterprise server itself will be out soon to support the new policy settings, and other new features. If you are an Enterprise customer, you can use this new agent and viewer with your Enterprise server. If your upgrade protection is no longer valid (If you purchased more than a year ago), you can upgrade for $99 per license here: ![]() If you are a current customer with active update protection you will get an email when the final version is released. Purchase now, and it will be a free update. ![]() You can change just the current session, or make them the default. Zooming on Remote Control has not had very many option in the past, now you can force it to a 1:1 ratio, and allow it to grow bigger than its actual size:įinally, the biggest update is that you can apply settings while you are connected. We have improved this, and now you get a better display of the progress on that session switch: Speaking of RDP sessions, not sure if you know it – the current version of Remote Control allows you to jump into an active remote desktop session. This beta supports jumping into those multi monitor sessions and seeing all monitors. Windows 7 Ultimate has a feature that allows you to have multiple monitors within an RDP session. This is not something you want to use all the time, since it can drive the CPU utilization up on the remote side, but it can really help with those temperamental apps. It will refresh the screen at the specified interval. We added a feature so you can get around this – automatic refresh: This makes it difficult to see updates to the screen. When that happens, our agent can’t get the changes and send them to the remote side. No longer will you need to guess if the remote side has CAPS lock on or off – it will automatically switch to the setting that you have on your side.Īnother issue is that some applications use a non-standard way of painting to the screen. You see it even with Microsoft Remote Desktop – Not with the new beta. You can disable this using our group policy adm template or the server settings if it is against company policy.ĬAPS lock has been a huge irritation. We added a new option that will keep the screen saver from turning on while you are connected: Spy mode is just one of the many updates in this release.Įver remote into a computer to do some work, and then get locked out because the screen saver activates when you are not looking? If you want toggle spy mode you can do it without moving the mouse. When the policy is in place, the spy mode button will not even appear: To satisfy the needs of organizations that cannot have this type of functionality, we have added group policy and server options to disable spy mode. This setting is designed to prevent the remote user from knowing that you are connected and watching. The capture engine also avoids the mouse so it does not create a flicker that is detected by the user. All of the performance options like removing the background, turning off glass, the status window, the flashing tray icon are turned off. When it is on, your mouse and keyboard movements are not sent. I think we found a good balance between these two in the new beta of IntelliAdmin Remote Control.įirst, we added a new button that allows you to enable “Spy Mode”: On the other hand, there are customers who do need to watch “problem” users without them knowing. Many companies do not want their IT staff to watch other computers without notifying the remote user. We have resisted because obviously this can be a security risk. For a long time people have asked, “Is there a way I can secretly watch a computer with your Remote Control?”
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