4 comments

  • solarkraft 2 hours ago
    Looks very interesting, but i’m a bit surprised the most important feature isn’t mentioned: How well does clipboard sharing work?
    • wcrossbow 2 hours ago
      Im not a big fan of Windows but copy pasting a file across 3 nested RDP sessions feels magical every time
      • ktpsns 1 hour ago
        To be honest, three nested RDPs sound like a terrible hack. In an ideal world, this would be two port forwardings and one RDP (thinking about ssh, which is still underrepresented in windows world). In an even more ideal world, this would be an IPv6 direct access ;-)
        • everforward 53 minutes ago
          There are legit reasons, at least for two nested sessions. A production network that’s airgapped except for a bastion host that acts as a gateway. It’s better than port forwarding because you have to auth to the bastion host before the RDP chaining, and it often takes separate credentials for the second RDP session.

          It’s a semi-common setup for higher security environments, and when you have a network of stuff that has known vulnerabilities you can’t patch for whatever reason. Traffic in and out is super carefully firewalled. It’s not great, but it’s better than a 25 year old MySQL with a direct public IP.

        • orisho 52 minutes ago
          It's probably there not as a way to connect networks, but as a way to keep them separate, only allowing RDP between specific computers on different networks.
    • d3Xt3r 2 hours ago
      And desktop scaling. And multi-monitor support. And file transfers. And drive redirection. And peripheral redirection. And...
      • rvz 1 hour ago
        ...A test suite, And security audits, And most importantly benchmarks.

        What it does have is a license which it is GPLv3. So if anyone adds all those changes, they have to make the source code available with the same software license.

        • pixel_popping 40 minutes ago
          In this era tho, licenses (I don't agree with this, but this is what it is) are a matter of "tokens", I speak for a fact knowing multiple relatively-big companies just gobbling GPLv3 projects and rewriting them entirely, some do publish them as well.
  • jqpabc123 3 hours ago
    Interesting from a technical perspective but with native RDP clients readily available on just about every platform, I don't see the need for it.
    • le-mark 1 hour ago
      When it’s in a browser you don’t need to install anything on the local machine. I used to use Apache guacamole to access my machine at home from work when I was stuck in a cube all day.

      https://guacamole.apache.org/

    • pixel_popping 42 minutes ago
      Browsers are sandboxes, your native client often isn't, there is definitely a huge advantage, portability and embeddability as well, it's also simpler to sniff traffic (and MITM it).
    • boredishBoi 2 hours ago
      Not many good MFA options for native RDP/RDG. Putting it in the browser lets you wrap the whole thing with OAUTH/passkeys etc
  • johnwhitman 18 minutes ago
    [dead]
  • sebakubisz 1 hour ago
    [dead]