![]() ![]() rdg file produced by RDCMan is actually just an XML file (discovered by dropping the file into Notepad) so I figured that it’d be quite straightforward to automate the production of this using PowerShell, grabbing a list of servers from AD (or. With some 200 servers (at the time) this was a potentially painstaking task, and one that I didn’t want to undertake if there was an easier alternative. ![]() The downside to this simple tool though is that you have to add servers manually, one by one. I was very relieved to find RDCMan produced by Microsoft. It made absolutely no sense to have to open multiple unique Remote Desktop / mstsc.exe windows to every server you wanted to work on. ![]() I found this utility about 3 years ago when searching for an easier way to manage remote desktop connections to multiple Windows servers. The author had discovered an extremely handy tool for managing multiple remote desktop connections and seemingly puzzled over why it wasn’t more well known my thoughts exactly. When I stumbled across this article on IT Pro in June this year a knowing smile crept across my face. ![]()
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