Resolved my issue. Clear instructions. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped. Didn't match my screen. Incorrect instructions. Too technical. Not enough information. Not enough pictures. Any additional feedback? Submit feedback. Thank you for your feedback! This allows you to switch without disconnecting and reconnecting, but there are two gotchas:. It actually doesn't change the resolution, so it may go into fullscreen mode with the blue bar at the top, but still have scrollbars at the side.
Makes it tricky. I agree that it's kind of broken. I'm often switching between different external monitors with different resolutions and I'm sick of having to always go to the display tab and click full screen. I seem to be suddenly running into this with XP.
Possibly an upgrade was pushed to my desktop while I was away from the office for a week. I was at the full screen of the computer I remoted to. Now my Remote Desktop always opens in an actual window, with borders on 4 sides, and I have to scroll to the bottom to use the START button or task bar, then I have scroll back to the top to fully see what's on the desktop.
This scrolling up and down, left and right, is a pain in the neck. Do I have to save a different options file for every computer that I remote to? I have this problem too On Windows 7. Dell XPS14 laptop No Pause Key No Break Key The thing that bugs me most is What's changed and WHY? Now suddenly I can't go to full screen without exiting and resetting the screen size with the slide bar in the options! Seems this has been broken in Windows 7.
It still works fine as it used to on my old M65 running Vista. Why has this been broken in Windows 7? How come no one at MS noticed? The marked answer is not acceptable. Sure it works when you initially open the connection but if you minimize or restore the window the problem comes back as before. Pause is in blue on my F12 key. Also, make sure the "Use all my monitors for the remote session" box underneath the slider bar is unchecked if you have two differing monitor resolutions, because it will select the smaller of the two in order to make it completely fit on both screens.
Likewise, if you switch from a larger screen height inside of your RDP session, you will still see the scrollbars because the RDP client recognizes the larger of the screens as the "Full Screen" option. There is definitely work that can be done to make this process less painful. Step your game up, MS. Please use the color depth of the remote session as Hghest Quality 32 bit. Thank you very much. Today was the first time I used remote desktop in Win7 and I got this problem. I tried to do every other thing and saw the slider too, but never thought that moving it to the extreme will make it go full screen.
Thanks for the wonderful findings! Btw, Microsoft has released a hotfix to address this issue. It seems that this issue occur when running with the resolution of x pixels. No wonder my home laptop running x pixels doesn't experience this problem, but my office laptop does. For those who cannot reset to full mode eg. Now, if you have a multi-monitor this trick only works in the display where you started the full screen.
Life saver, connect to up to servers during a normal day and was pulling hair out. Virtual drink on its way to you. Hope this helps someone! I had a similar issue but with using a secondary monitor attached to my laptop Lenovo T that was a higher resolution than the internal panel. The Terminal Services window would always seem to either max out at the full screen resolution of my smaller panel when full screened on the big monitor It was an easy solution yet we search on the internet instead of looking all the available options Hey there, even I felt annoyed everytime time I got the RDP screen back out of full screen, so as Aaron has said below, give it a try..
Maybe there's a way to turn that off, but WTF- I don't have an another hour to chase it down. Hi, -Start "Remote Desktop Connection". I was going nuts trying to find a solution how to solve this issue when RDP to a jump box and then RDP again to a different server.
The servers resolution's can't be changed as the it was blocked by IT. It is funny how after 9 years, since you posted the comment, this issue still exist! Office Office Exchange Server. Not an IT pro? Windows Client. Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums.
Windows 7 Installation, Setup, and Deployment. Sign in to vote. My PC at home has a square monitor and my work PC has a widescreen monitor. I used webapps citrix from home to get into work environment then remoted to my workstation. Since doing that, when I am physically at the workstation at work , I can no longer remote desktop to servers in full screen mode. Instead, it does a smaller window with "full screen settings".
Any help appreciated. Friday, November 20, PM. Saturday, November 21, AM. Setting slidebar to full screen did the trick, thanks!
Monday, November 23, PM. Proposed as answer by rightvol Tuesday, November 23, AM. Wednesday, September 1, PM. Tuesday, November 23, AM. Thursday, December 23, PM. Thanks This does not address the fact that this functionality is broken in basically all version of Remote Desktop Connection. The real problem is that when you switch from RDPing into one machine with a given resolution, and then to another with a different resolution, it always remembers the last resolution, and so you end up with a mismatched RDP window that will not go full screen until you disconnect, then adjust the slider again.
It's incredibly annoying. The RDP client should re-detect each time it is connecting to any machine what the full screen resolution should be. God this annoys me every single day. I'm with ya jamieschmidt. Super annoying. For years this has been a problem. If I exit from full screen, I can never get it back, unless I disconnect and reconnect. I need daily counseling because of this. Report abuse. Details required :. Cancel Submit. Nithyananda J. Hi, Follow these below steps and check if the issue gets resolved.
Method 1: -Start "Remote Desktop Connection". For more information about Remote Desktop Connection refer this below Windows help article. How satisfied are you with this reply?
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