Software

anydesk

AnyDesk

AnyDesk isn’t perfect. But when you need to connect now — not in five minutes, not after configuring ssh tunnels — it usually works. That’s why a lot of sysadmins and support folks keep it around. Not because it’s fancy. Because it gets them back into the system before the call even finishes.

DWS

DWService

DWService is one of those tools that quietly solves a real-world problem. It won’t replace your enterprise remote desktop setup, and it’s not built for full-blown support desks. But when you just need access — quick, reliable, cross-platform — it does the job without getting in your way. Sometimes, simple wins.

rustdesk

RustDesk

RustDesk is what happens when remote access is built with developers and sysadmins in mind — not sales teams. No ads, no forced upgrades, no cloud dependency unless you want it. Just a clean, capable tool that does its job and stays quiet. If your organization prefers keeping control over infrastructure and values speed over branding, RustDesk is worth a serious look.

ThinLinc

ThinLinc

ThinLinc doesn’t reinvent remote access — it just makes Linux desktop delivery actually usable. If you’re tired of hacks, wrappers, and duct-taped tunnels, this is a surprisingly clean way to give users real desktop sessions without breaking your infrastructure.

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