![]() It also is a little bit on the expensive side of things, would rather not drop nearly $3k AUD for 5 users / servers. The last thing I've discovered is a tool called sound-over-rdp, but I can't seem to find any feedback as to whether it's a good tool or not. Other people have suggested installing VOIP software on the local machine - but having to flip flop between the local and remote environment sounds really annoying. ![]() When doing some research I found that some people were experimenting with to passing through a USB audio device, but I can't seem to find a way to do this on a Windows 11 Pro workstation - I enabled the group policy option for RemoteFX USB passthrough on my client PC but I still can't seem to find this as an option. Before I send out another smartphone, I wanted to do a little bit of digging to see if there are better remote audio solutions available. Unfortunately this causes VOIP calls to have a LOT of lag (probably about 1000ms latency or more) and is generally not great. Remote audio redirection works OK if latency is low (under 30ms), but we now have someone who has over 150ms ping to their remote workstation. We then either use a work smartphone for VOIP calls, or using remote audio redirection via RDP. ![]() ![]() During the 2020 lockdowns we got fairly settled with a remote working configuration that involves our remote team using RDP on a thin client of sorts, remotely controlling a remote Windows 11 Pro workstation (via a VPN). ![]()
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