| Windows Version | RDP Wrapper 1.8 | Notes | |----------------|----------------|-------| | Windows 7 SP1 | ✅ Full | Perfect | | Windows 8.1 | ✅ Full | Needs admin install | | Windows 10 1809–21H2 | ✅ Mostly | May need updated INI | | Windows 10 22H2 | ⚠️ Partial | Some builds broken | | Windows 11 21H2 | ⚠️ Partial | Use latest dev INI | | Windows 11 22H2+ | ❌ No | MS changed RDP stack |
to a folder (e.g., C:\RDPWrap )
RDP Wrapper sits at an uneasy intersection of utility and legality, technical ingenuity and ethical ambiguity. At a glance it’s a small project with a simple promise: enable multiple Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) sessions or unlock remote desktop features on Windows editions where Microsoft restricts them. That promise addresses a real, pragmatic pain point—users, administrators, and hobbyists frequently need remote access flexibility that base Windows Home or single-session Professional editions don’t offer without buying server licenses or higher-tier client versions. But the project’s practicality belies a deeper series of questions about what it means to adapt software beyond its vendor-intended limits. rdp wrapper 1.8