Little-known tips in Win XP remote login

  
        Remote Desktop is a new feature of Windows XP Professional. By using this function, we can log in from other computers through the network to the computer with Remote Desktop enabled, view the desktop content of the computer, operate the programs installed on the computer, and access the remote computer. All files saved.

However, this feature has a limitation. If you have already logged in to the computer locally, then if you want to log in remotely, users who have logged in locally will not be able to continue using the computer (Figure 1). If the fast user switching feature is turned on on the remote computer, the locally logged in user can only disconnect his or her own session and return to the welcome screen; if the remote computer disables the fast user switching feature, the locally logged in user must log out. Is there any good way to get local and remote users to log in and use a remote computer at the same time? Keep looking down.


Figure 1

In the beta version of Windows XP Service Pack 2 Build 2055, the system that installed the patch once supported two users to log in at the same time, but I don’t know why. This feature was removed in the final official release of Service Pack 2. Fortunately, through a file in the original beta version of SP2, we can still let our computer implement this function.

To use this method, make sure your computer is Windows XP Professional and has Service Pack 2 installed. Secondly, you need the termrv.dll file in SP2 version 2055.

First make sure that there is no Windows XP installation CD in your CD-ROM drive, then run "Services.msc" to open the service settings window, find the Terminal Service service, double-click to open the Properties dialog box, in the "Startup Type" drop-down menu Select "Disabled" in, then restart your computer.

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