Windows RDP Drop refers to a method of terminating remote desktop connections.
Windows RDP Drop refers to a method of terminating remote desktop connections.
The aim is to have about 30 people using Photoshop simultaneously on a single Windows machine via VMware through Windows RDP. It functions most of the time but occasionally experiences unstable connections, screen freezes, drops, and blurred views. After reconnecting, it usually restarts in roughly 30 seconds to 2 minutes. There seems to be no built-in fix; it appears Windows is handling network issues on its own.
Network speed stays around 300kbps per user, totaling about 4mbps when no one is downloading or using other services. The CPU usage changes depending on activity—rises during heavy edits but drops to around 20-40% for short bursts when starting new software or tackling tough tasks.
What operating system is the VM host using? It appears to be based on a CPU or network constraint. With CIRCUIT/VMware Horizon, each user runs in their own VM, so the hardware must meet those requirements. They also support app remote access, meaning you can use Photoshop just like usual without needing a full desktop session.
Consider using Citrix XenServer, ESXi, Linux with KVM, or Windows Server instead of a desktop OS. For powerful GPU needs, a Tesla or grid GPU paired with ESXi or XenServer is ideal. If budget matters, virtualize workstations on AWS.
You were completely correct. After removing all users from one account and dividing them, everything functions perfectly now.