
Remote Desktop Manager
Remote Connections & Passwords. Everywhere!
What is Remote Desktop Manager?
Remote Desktop Manager lets you centralize all your remote connections, passwords and credentials into a unique platform that can be securely shared between users. Drive security, speed and productivity through your organization while reducing risks for your IT department. Join over 400 000 users in more than 140 countries who enjoy our remote connection management solution.
Remote Desktop Manager is available in two editions: Free and Enterprise. While the Free edition is perfect for stand-alone users, the Enterprise edition is best suited for multiple users and teams. You can compare both editions by exploring our comparison chart.
Connect any session types, such as: RDP, SSH, ARD, Web, VNC, Telnet, ICA/HDX, TeamViewer, LogMeIn and many more.
Browse shared folders or cloud repositories, such as DropBox, Amazon S3, Microsoft Azure Storage.
Import or integrate existing password managers, such as KeePass and many more.
Connect to any FTP, SFTP or FTPS site.
Remote Desktop Manager Screenshots






Remote Desktop Manager Features
Remote Desktop Manager information
Supported Languages
- English
- Czech
- Dutch
- French
- German
- Hungarian
- Italian
- Polish
- Russian
- Chinese
- Spanish
- Swedish
- Ukrainian
Apple AppStore
- Updated
- 3.51 avg rating
Comments and Reviews
Tags
- Password Manager
- Remote Desktop
- File Manager
- VPN
- hyper-v
- connection-manager
- powershell
- FTP Client
- ssh-manager
- telnet
- credentials
Recent user activities on Remote Desktop Manager
- aragusuku commented on Remote Desktop Managerar
some of these reviews seem paid/bots
- nathantuggy reviewed Remote Desktop Managerna
Supports lots of features and protocols, at least notionally, but actual fit and finish is awful, and many things just straight up do not work. For example, accessing multiple monitors on a Mac is impossible. Finding the documentation that explains this is difficult, since their help site is pretty terribly organized and loudly proclaims the specialized features that do work in a few situations as though they work for everything. Compared to all other remote desktop solutions I've used (TeamViewer, Microsoft's RDP, OSS software for RDP) it's just a pile of half-finished featuritis.
- nonethefewer edited Remote Desktop Managerno
I used to be an avid supporter of MobaXterm and others, but RDM completely changed my life in managing a large infrastructure. If you ever wanted to be able to do virtually anything across a large number of systems, RDM is the swiss army knife of remote desktop managers. It supports everything! AutoHotKey.. AutoIT, and just.. everything! Get it right meow!
well , as the title says Remote desktop manager is easy to use from any platform Windows mac android linux , if you need a software to manage a bulk of computers with any remote protocol SSH RDP .. RDM is the one you need ! with a fully customization of your work-space it makes life easy for sysadmins !
Supports lots of features and protocols, at least notionally, but actual fit and finish is awful, and many things just straight up do not work. For example, accessing multiple monitors on a Mac is impossible. Finding the documentation that explains this is difficult, since their help site is pretty terribly organized and loudly proclaims the specialized features that do work in a few situations as though they work for everything. Compared to all other remote desktop solutions I've used (TeamViewer, Microsoft's RDP, OSS software for RDP) it's just a pile of half-finished featuritis.
some of these reviews seem paid/bots
We use RDM for a long time and we always been satisfied by the solution offered! Would defenitly recommend!
I've been using RDM for about a year now and it makes managing remote connection profiles so much easier. I've even downloaded it at home now to use for connecting to my home lab machines!
As has been said it's a Swiss army knife of remote desktop managers and more, all of your connections include virtualization consoles in one, password manager, support for script and macros, and Powershell, you need to try.