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Very nice to be able to switch between regions, see the list of your instances, AMIs, etc. I’ve used the AWS Console from here as well.
If you have VMware Player or Workstation installed, no need to launch the program to control the VM.
VMware Console and Remote Console are big here, as well as the vSphere Client. My top ones here are Microsoft RDP, SCP/WinSCP, SSH, FTP/Filezilla, Citrix ICA/Web, Dell iDRAC, HP iLO, Teamviewer, the list goes on and on…. Lets take a look at some of the types of connections you can manage with RDM. Once you make the switch, there is no turning back! Eventually, I saw all the features I was missing out on and decided to switch to the Enterprise version. This made it easy to manage my credentials without the enterprise license (which allows for stored credential entries to be used for individual entries, folders, etc). I liked that I could store my credentials at the folder level and propagate them down the tree. I felt that it was the best tool for my needs. I evaluated a few different tools, finally settling on RDM.
I’ve told the story before, but I started using the free version when I wanted to find a tool that manages all my RDP connections in one place. By being able to manage all my remote connections in one place, it saves a lot of time and makes my job a LOT easier! If you follow me on Social Media, you’ll see that I’m a strong supporter of Remote Desktop Manager by Devolutions. Devolutions Remote Desktop Manager – My IT Tool of Choice