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desktop sharing tool

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Deozaan:
TeamViewer is free for personal use and easy enough for anyone to use. Both parties run it. Your in-laws would run it and tell you the code it shows on their screen, which you then type in to connect to them.

Have your in-laws download TeamViewer Quick Support, meanwhile you'll need the more fully featured TeamViewer package.

They also allow more advanced setups like unattended access, etc. So you can connect remotely without anyone being there to give you permission.

Shades:
AnyDesk is quite similar to TeamViewer, because a lot of the original developers left TeamViewer to work on that instead. AnyDesk doesn't bother you with on-screen messages/mails to upgrade to the newest version. TeamViewer does not do backwards-compatibility so well. And that is by design as they almost force you to upgrade to their newest commercially licensed (expensive) products and it could happen that you cannot take over the computer you need/want, because of too different versions between your own computer and the one you try to take over.

Can you still spend quite some time having the person on the other end of the line download the latest TeamViewer and install it and possibly open up ports on their firewall, etc. I have been using the free version of Anydesk for almost 2 years now and while the software gets regular updates, there is hardly any "pushing" to newer versions going on. A much more relaxed stance, which I can appreciate. Likely also the reason why those devs left TeamViewer in the first place.   

anandcoral:
AnyDesk is quite similar to TeamViewer, because a lot of the original developers left TeamViewer to work on that instead. AnyDesk doesn't bother you with on-screen messages/mails to upgrade to the newest version. TeamViewer does not do backwards-compatibility so well. And that is by design as they almost force you to upgrade to their newest commercially licensed (expensive) products and it could happen that you cannot take over the computer you need/want, because of too different versions between your own computer and the one you try to take over.
-Shades (May 14, 2018, 01:43 AM)
--- End quote ---

Agree. I have to give support to my clients many times a day and AnyDesk has proved its worth, as of now. Previously I used TeamViewer and Remote Desktop, but now AnyDesk is the go to for all my support sessions. Small, fast and without any unnecessary bells and whistles.

Regards,

Anand

Target:
thanks guys! I shall have to look into anydesk :Thmbsup:

FWIW when I googled TeamViewer there seemed to be a few question marks around it, hence my query

Steven Avery:
AnyDesk seems to show a minimum of $80 a year.

There is lots of use where Skype and TeamViewer are excellent, for free.

So, in a light usage, or modest usage where you use Skype anyway, what would justify the 80, or is there some secret free?

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