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Corrected indentation
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@ -34,7 +34,9 @@ From its release, Windows 10 has supported remote connections to PCs joined to A
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Ensure [Remote Credential Guard](/windows/access-protection/remote-credential-guard), a new feature in Windows 10, version 1607, is turned off on the client PC you are using to connect to the remote PC.
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Ensure [Remote Credential Guard](/windows/access-protection/remote-credential-guard), a new feature in Windows 10, version 1607, is turned off on the client PC you are using to connect to the remote PC.
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- On the PC you want to connect to:
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- On the PC you want to connect to:
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1. Open system properties for the remote PC.
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1. Open system properties for the remote PC.
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2. Enable **Allow remote connections to this computer** and select **Allow connections only from computers running Remote Desktop with Network Level Authentication**.
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2. Enable **Allow remote connections to this computer** and select **Allow connections only from computers running Remote Desktop with Network Level Authentication**.
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@ -43,7 +45,7 @@ Ensure [Remote Credential Guard](/windows/access-protection/remote-credential-gu
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> [!NOTE]
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> [!NOTE]
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> You can specify individual Azure AD accounts for remote connections by having the user sign in to the remote device at least once, and then running the following PowerShell cmdlet:
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> You can specify individual Azure AD accounts for remote connections by having the user sign in to the remote device at least once, and then running the following PowerShell cmdlet:
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> ```PowerShell
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> ```powershell
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> net localgroup "Remote Desktop Users" /add "AzureAD\the-UPN-attribute-of-your-user"
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> net localgroup "Remote Desktop Users" /add "AzureAD\the-UPN-attribute-of-your-user"
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> ```
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> ```
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> where *the-UPN-attribute-of-your-user* is the name of the user profile in C:\Users\, which is created based on the DisplayName attribute in Azure AD.
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> where *the-UPN-attribute-of-your-user* is the name of the user profile in C:\Users\, which is created based on the DisplayName attribute in Azure AD.
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@ -63,8 +65,8 @@ Ensure [Remote Credential Guard](/windows/access-protection/remote-credential-gu
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> [!TIP]
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> [!TIP]
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> When you connect to the remote PC, enter your account name in this format: `AzureAD UPN`. The local PC must either be domain-joined or Azure AD-joined. The local PC and remote PC must be in the same Azure AD tenant.
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> When you connect to the remote PC, enter your account name in this format: `AzureAD UPN`. The local PC must either be domain-joined or Azure AD-joined. The local PC and remote PC must be in the same Azure AD tenant.
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> [!Note]
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> [!Note]
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> If you cannot connect using Remote Desktop Connection 6.0, you must turn off the new features of RDP 6.0 and revert back to RDP 5.0 by making a few changes in the RDP file. See the details in the [support article](https://support.microsoft.com/help/941641/remote-desktop-connection-6-0-prompts-you-for-credentials-before-you-e).
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> If you cannot connect using Remote Desktop Connection 6.0, you must turn off the new features of RDP 6.0 and revert back to RDP 5.0 by making a few changes in the RDP file. See the details in the [support article](https://support.microsoft.com/help/941641/remote-desktop-connection-6-0-prompts-you-for-credentials-before-you-e).
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## Supported configurations
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## Supported configurations
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