Mstsc Multimon Windows 7 Professional Hack
I have tried to remote desktop from my Windows 7 RC machine at home to my office Windows Vista. Windows 7 Remote Desktop with multi-monitor. Windows 7 pro remote desktop true multi monitor support patch or hack. I need Dual monitor support and would have used the multimon i:1 edit thing however. Alternatives to RDP under Windows 7 Professional using 2. Sorry sam but you cant connect to windows 7 pro in tru multimon. Multimon rdp support in win 7 pro as.
Hello Rich Baker, Thank you for using Microsoft Answers forum. Remote Desktop Connection supports high-resolution displays that can be spanned across multiple monitors. However, the total resolution on all monitors must be under 4096 x 2048 pixels. The monitors must have the same resolution. Additionally, the monitors must be aligned side-by-side.
To have the desktop of the remote computer span multiple monitors, type Mstsc /span at a command prompt. Thanks for using the Answers Forum.
Please let us know how this works out. Joseph Microsoft Answers Support Engineer Visit our and let us know what you think.
If you’re one of the lucky people who purchased a computer with Windows 7 Home Premium on it, you might be surprised to know that it doesn’t support remote desktop connections out of the box. Microsoft wants you to upgrade your edition of Windows in order to get this feature. Luckily, there’s a little hack we can use to get it working on Home Premium. Here’s the steps to get it working:. Download and extract it to a location on your PC. Navigate to the folder you just extracted and right click Install.cmd, then choose Run as administrator.
You’ll get a window similar to the one below and you should now be good to go: You can also enable multiple sessions per user, and the logging in of users with a blank password (although I wouldn’t recommend this). There are some switches that are available when running the program:.? – Show this help. help – Same as -?. multi – Enable multiple sessions per user.
blank – Enable remote log on for user accounts that are not password protected So for example, if you wanted to enable multiple sessions per user:. Go to start and find Command Prompt. Right click it and select Run as administrator. At the prompt type cd “c: DIRECTORY TO EXTRACTED FILES”.
The prompt should switch to c: DIRECTORY TO EXTRACTED FILES. Type: Install multi Thanks to the guys over at for this hack. Clipboard Sharing When I installed this hack, one thing I noticed was that the clipboard sharing wasn’t working when I first connected. What I had to do to remedy it was open up the task manager on the remote machine, end the ‘rdpclip.exe’ process and restart it – either through Start Run or in the task manager by going to File New Task (Run). You could automate this process by creating a simple batch script if you’d like, similar to the one below. There are some files missing from Win 7 Home Premium required for features such as clipboard sharing.
Reinstall Mstsc Windows 10
Rdpclip.exe is supposed to run on the remote system when you log in, but if you check, there is no rdpclip.exe in the System32 directory in Win 7 Home Premium. I run Ultimate on my primary system, so I simply copied all rdp. files not present on the Home Premium system over, and restarted my connection. That’s all it took. Now it loads rdpclip.exe on login and my clipboard is shared. I haven’t tested local print support yet. I have an older hp computer which has Windows 7 Ultimate on it.
I just bought a new computer which comes with Windows 7 home. I want to be able to connect these two together as there are a lot of programs and documents that i have on my older computer that I don’t really want to put on my new one. I am putting all of my video and photo prgrams on my new one. What I want is for the new computer to be the main computer and for me to be able to access the older one. Can you do this or would I have to download the “fix” so that my new computer is the one that taps into my old one?
Hi, I have 2x (Genuine) Windows 7 Home Premium machines, one is tucked away in a difficult location and is used as my Media Center, so I need to Remote Desktop to it to perform updates, correct the usual aggravating Windows issues, etc I have installed the hack on both machines, and have found it only works one-way, unfortunately for me, the wrong way. I can access my main W7HP machine from the W7HP Media Center, but I can’t access the Media Center from my main machine.
When I ran Install.cmd (as administrator) it worked great on my main machine, but on the Media Centre I am told that I have an incorrect W7 build (apparently it’s only for build 7601). I don’t know how to find out what build it is that I have installed. Can I upgrade my build somehow to the correct one for the hack? Cheers, Scott.
Hi there, First thank you SO MUCH for this. I ran the hack and it seemed to work.
I verified that my machine is listening on port 3389 with netstat. I also checked that the Remote Desktop service is running and did a reboot just to make sure. Windows Firewall is checked to allow RDP through. I’m trying to connect to my home machine with my iPad using an app made for this purpose.
(Worked over VNC once upon a time) The issue is when I go to Remote Settings in my System Properties the entire section for Remote Desktop is missing. So I can’t select any of the options to allow connections. Is there something else I should try to make this show up? Any help is greatly appreciated! How do you turn multi on and off? I’d like to be able to log onto PC 1 as user A, and then RDC in from PC 2 as user B without logging off user A, which this patch enables. But I’d also like to RDC in from PC 2 as user A and take over the original user A login.
As it is now, I get a second user A login. In the case of my media center I want to take over the user currently playing videos as well as administer it without disturbing the user currently playing videos. Can I get what I want?. Pingback:. Pingback:. Pingback:.
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