Aug 17, 2017 · In our network, there are several terminal servers based on Windows Server 2012 R2 with Remote Desktop Services (RDS) role, which connects many users from branches and regional offices. It has become necessary to detect, which terminal users sessions generate the bulk of traffic thus loading WAN channels.

This will be: 1.5mb down /33.6k up. This is a very limited upload speed but I was wondering if it is sufficient to work through Remote Desktop connections. What type of bandwidth useage does Remote Desktop use when you are remotely connected? Is it mostly downstream to the client that is connecting? Thanks a lot as this is an important decision! Jun 14, 2010 · The different remote desktop clients may help it a bit as there may be less resources in use (depending on system) to be able to give more to remote desktop. But the protocol isn't going to change. Mar 18, 2012 · If you are doing that over your 3g/4g thats a lot of data. Typical compressed 720p video is 300 to 500 mb per half hour. So for every hour you use splashtop you are going to use probably between .5gb and a 1gb depending on how well they compress it. At least in the HD versions. Apr 28, 2011 · Some will not even install. I had a Pentium 4 @ 2.3 GHz and some games that called for at least a dual core would play, but poorly. RAM is another issue. If you don't have a lot of RAM to begin with gaming is tough. If you are running a lot of background programs it can be worse because you don't always have a lot left over to run programs like Jul 16, 2014 · Without remote access to your network, this can be an inconvenient situation. This is just one way that a remote desktop connection can save you a lot of headaches. Windows Remote Desktop Connection (RDC) is a feature that enables you to connect and use another Windows computer, either within your LAN or via the Internet. Sep 08, 2009 · But it seems like Remote Desktop does not use the Max network bandwidth to get better and faster graphical result. It works slowly when i paint some stuff on Photoshop. The client computer has got a wireless 54Mbps connection on the network, which means 6MB per second data transfer rate.

I would just use remote desktop tools to manage your servers. VNC especially works quite well with low bandwidth, high latency connections. One thing to let you know though. Make sure that you have someone that can go to the site and has access to the network equipment. We have almost 20 sites like this, and about 2 go down a month.

Jul 16, 2014 · Without remote access to your network, this can be an inconvenient situation. This is just one way that a remote desktop connection can save you a lot of headaches. Windows Remote Desktop Connection (RDC) is a feature that enables you to connect and use another Windows computer, either within your LAN or via the Internet. Sep 08, 2009 · But it seems like Remote Desktop does not use the Max network bandwidth to get better and faster graphical result. It works slowly when i paint some stuff on Photoshop. The client computer has got a wireless 54Mbps connection on the network, which means 6MB per second data transfer rate. Sep 20, 2017 · At any rate, my desktop computer does not have a NIC team installed. It uses a single, 1Gbps adapter. I configured the utility to transfer a file to a file share residing on a computer that is configured to use a NIC team. In other words, the file transfer speed would have been limited to 1Gbps because of the speed of the NIC in my desktop

Remote desktop is a program or an operating system feature that allows a user to connect to a computer in another location, see that computer's desktop and interact with it as if it were local.

Remote Desktop - Allow access to your PC from outside your PC's network. 04/04/2018; 2 minutes to read; In this article. Applies to: Windows 10, Windows Server 2016. When you connect to your PC by using a Remote Desktop client, you're creating a peer-to-peer connection. This means you need direct access to the PC (sometimes called "the host"). Apr 11, 2013 · Something else must be going on. I would imagine that a 16mbps connection should be good enough for RDP. You'd be using a small fraction of that bandwidth. Try to use another Remote Desktop utility like VNC or something and see if you still have the same issue. Help narrow down if the issue was bandwidth or software.