

- #Anydesk review 2020 install#
- #Anydesk review 2020 portable#
- #Anydesk review 2020 license#
- #Anydesk review 2020 Offline#
For example – you’d want to have “DELL LAPTOP” as a tag across multiple categories, but filtering by that tag will only display for the category you’re currently viewing. This makes it tedious to find specific types of machines. While it supports using tags to categorize the systems, these tags are also limited to the group you are viewing.
#Anydesk review 2020 Offline#
I’ve not seen any filtering options – no way to hide offline systems. The customized names in the address book don’t remain when you connect – it changes to the connection ID/number. This means – if I have BUSINESS1 – BUSINESS2 – HOME – and I want to search for a computer that I can’t recall where it is, then I’ll have to switch between each category and then search. The way it works is a bit tedious – and the search is limited to the group you’re viewing. I don’t know what the limit is with the address book in AnyDesk, but I’ve not exhausted it so far. There are no meeting options available at current from what I’ve seen.
#Anydesk review 2020 install#
By “runs portable” that means you don’t have to install or setup anything.
#Anydesk review 2020 portable#
The program runs portable by default and gives you the connection options immediately. Remote ConnectionsĪnyDesk is one of the fastst to get going. I need to know exactly which group the system I’m looking for is in before I can do the search – or else it will constantly turn up blank. Let’s say I have “FAMILY” separate from “BUSINESS1” and “BUSINESS2”. The main issue is the inability to search across the entire set of addresses – searches are restricted only to the category you’re in. Of all the different remote connection tools I’ve used, AnyDesk’s address book isn’t the best but also isn’t the worst. I say this because of the way the address book is structured. IMO – the product is more geared towards managing a few organizations with the option of immediate support. The product is priced cheaper than TeamViewer and has very similar features. This was a quick writeup and solely based on my usage of the product.ĪnyDesk has come up out of Germany much like TeamViewer. Customization – 3/5 (customization a bit tedious).Address book – 3/5 (uncertain of limit – search is tedious).Ease of setup – 5/5 (one of the easiest to setup/instruct on use).Also the Mac Version used to be buggy, haven't used it in a while, but Buggy as in all the text was white (not sure if it's on the latest OS X, have not used it in a while, been on Windows). If the connection is really slow, it can lag a bit, but you can optimize the image to be quick and disable the sound, whereas in Teamviewer, the image will just freeze and you have to quit Teamviewer, the only issue with AnyDesk is just the CPU Usage. It can be a little bit heavy on the CPU side when using it on older hardware.

Anydesk has a lot of the options you would need from Teamviewer and does them right and secure. Anydesk has also improved with time, which now I find no use to keep paying for Teamviewer which has become really expensive as of late.

You can transfer files, keep bookmarks of your most accessed computers or just organize them. It works exactly how'd you expect if you come from using Teamviewer or other remote desktop access applications.
#Anydesk review 2020 license#
Really pleasant and a great alternative whenever the Teamviewer License we use at work is under use and we've been considering and slowly moving our clients to AnyDesk because paying Teamviewer is now an expensive subscrption when there's so much good alternatives.
