Recommended Posts

After 10 years, Logmein's free version of their service is being discontinued.

Starting today (January 21st) users will be prompted when they log in with a message saying, "Soon LogMeIn Free will no longer be available." And that you have only 7 days to pay or let your account expire.

 

In a [poor] attempt to buffer the pain of loosing a free service, Logmein are offering their paid-only service for a discounted price of $49 /year for up to 2 PC's. $129 /year for up to 5 PC's, and $229 /year for up to 10 PC's.

The discontinued free service was able to support up to 10 PC's.

 

You can find the answers to what they anticipate will be the most common questions here.  In addition, they have a dedicated area on their community site for fielding questions and feedback.

 

 

 

Source: http://blog.logmein.com/it-management/logmein-changes

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1197437-logmein-free-is-going-away/
Share on other sites

Hello,

Wondered when that would happen. I can see this occurring for a lot of other "free" services as well.

I dont know how it didnt happen earlier.

Teamviewer basically made a killing in this category and more so now that they have mobile clients (on Android, server too).

My previous experience with TeamViewer was bad.

The only way of having a smooth remote desktop was to drop the colours to 16bit, remove themes and wallpapers - and even then the redraw was poor.

Whereas LogMeIn was smooth no matter what settings.

Wow that sucks, Been using logmein for ages.
Switched to teamviewer last week simply cause of there being a teamviewer app for my 920. And Logmein uses png images when I login with my phone, very slow and anoying.

 

To bad though, but Teamviewer has replaced all I once needed from LMI. It runs as a service, I can access it from anywhere, anytime.

Are you guy's using this to access your own PC's or someone else's?

If its your own PC why not just forward a port and use Remote Desktop?

Teamviewer is great for connecting to family and friends computers with ease though.

Are you guy's using this to access your own PC's or someone else's?

If its your own PC why not just forward a port and use Remote Desktop?

Teamviewer is great for connecting to family and friends computers with ease though.

The reason logmein was good is you didn't need to port forward like you do with RDP, so you can have it on 10 computers on one public IP.

Many people have switched off of Logmein to go with other remote softwares, But for those that have stayed with logmein, this will effect you.  There are only 2 ways that you can stay with logmein now, that is with buying their pro service or their logmein central service.  The logmein central will offer up to 100 computers for $299, that is roughly $3 a computer at 100 computers, but if you only have 10 it is $30 a computer. 

 

http://blog.logmein.com/it-management/logmein-changes

 

at the bottom of this page it shows how many pcs you can have for free with the different purchase options

https://secure.logmein.com/products/central/purchase.aspx

Hello,

My previous experience with TeamViewer was bad.

The only way of having a smooth remote desktop was to drop the colours to 16bit, remove themes and wallpapers - and even then the redraw was poor.

Whereas LogMeIn was smooth no matter what settings.

Well, yes, if you are using a 56k modem, its the only way :p

But seriously, Ive used TV on a 512kbps connect....not even a 1mbps!!!

That lag was caused by something else. The current version is great and it gets better and better...

Hello,

Well, yes, if you are using a 56k modem, its the only way :p

But seriously, Ive used TV on a 512kbps connect....not even a 1mbps!!!

That lag was caused by something else. The current version is great and it gets better and better...

I used to LogMeIn to remote into my home PC to install TeamViewer, then I used TeamViewer to remote into my Home PC to uninstall LogMeIn.  The quality of the TeamViewer connection was perfect.  No dithering.  The only thing I noticed was checked off was wallpapers, but I have programs fullscreened anyways.

got the notification this morning as well as reading the blog post. This sucks. Their free service has been a mainstay for me for many years to remote connect to my personal computer from work as well as helping repair my parents computers when they had issues.

Hello,

I used to LogMeIn to remote into my home PC to install TeamViewer, then I used TeamViewer to remote into my Home PC to uninstall LogMeIn.  The quality of the TeamViewer connection was perfect.  No dithering.  The only thing I noticed was checked off was wallpapers, but I have programs fullscreened anyways.

Ive Teamviewed to one PC to Teamview to another PC to Teamview to another because I needed to find a ID!

Ive never really had any problems with speed or anything.

If you Teamview in your own network, use IPs. Its ALMOST like Windows Remote Desktop...

I find that TeamViewers WinRT, and other touch apps functions amazingly well, no connection issues, and have an easy to use full featured user experience.

 

Even just having that CTRL ALT DEL button in the toolbar, instead of the menu item makes a difference over other clients.

Are you guy's using this to access your own PC's or someone else's?

If its your own PC why not just forward a port and use Remote Desktop?

Teamviewer is great for connecting to family and friends computers with ease though.

 

That doesn't work if you use it to remote into a mac.  Looks like I will be moving over to teamviewer full time now.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Thanks for the advice guys, I'll give my current GPU a clean and then run the benchmarks to see how similar it is. Hopefully a bit of a clean-out will help it last a bit longer.
    • Pretty sure those will still be in this game. The series' well-explored psychosis themes will return as well.
    • "performance issues? what performance issues?!"
    • Microsoft making much needed change to Windows 11, 10 Patch Tuesday security updates by Sayan Sen Recently, Microsoft delivered its latest Defender patches for Windows 11 ISOs. These definitions are released from time to time alongside the general security updates available during Patch Tuesday. Speaking of Defender, the company has now announced another important change that affects how security updates are delivered to enterprise devices running Windows. According to a recent announcement, Microsoft Defender for Endpoint's endpoint detection and response (EDR) updates will no longer be bundled with the monthly Windows security updates or Patch Tuesdays. Instead the company is shifting delivery of these updates to Microsoft Update, bringing EDR servicing in line with several other Microsoft Defender components. If you recall, Microsoft last year moved PowerShell updates to Microsoft Update (MU) as well since it provides automatic updates for Microsoft products and services. Thus the move is intended to allow Microsoft to deliver EDR improvements and security enhancements independently of the OS's regular monthly update cycle; this should enable faster deployment of protection updates without requiring organizations to wait for the next Patch release. For those unfamiliar, Microsoft Defender for Endpoint's EDR capabilities are designed to help organizations detect, investigate, and respond to advanced threats across managed devices. Keeping these components updated is critical for maintaining protection against evolving attack techniques. The rollout has already began for Windows 10 devices in late May 2026 (last month) and Microsoft says it will gradually expand support to Windows 11 and the remaining supported Windows versions over the coming months. The company expects deployment across Windows 10 and Windows 11 to be completed by fall 2026 or around Q3 of this year. Once the transition is complete, EDR updates will be delivered through Microsoft Update using KB5005292, provided the required prerequisite updates have already been installed. Microsoft is also introducing a new Defender Update Service as part of the change. Following installation of the first update, devices will automatically create a new directory located at %ProgramData%\Microsoft\Microsoft Defender\Defender Update. Microsoft notes that restarts may occasionally be necessary in case of "rare" failure scenarios. For most organizations, the tech giant says no action will be required as long as Microsoft Update is already permitted within their update management strategy. Admins who rely on manually deployed update packages, however, will need to adjust their processes to ensure the new Defender update package is included. Microsoft also recommends reviewing internal documentation and notifying helpdesk and security operations teams about the updated delivery mechanism to avoid confusion during the transition. As a prerequisite, the tech giant notes that systems must be running Sense version 10.8798.25857.1000 or later and have one of the following Windows updates (or later) installed: Win11 24H2 KB5062660 (2025-07 Cumulative Update Preview) Win11 23H2 KB5062663 (2025-07 Cumulative Update Preview) Win11 22H2 KB5062663 (2025-07 Cumulative Update Preview) Win10 22H2 KB5062649 (2025-07 Cumulative Update Preview) Win10 1809 KB5063877 (2025-08 Cumulative Update) Server 2019 KB5063877 (2025-08 Cumulative Update) Server 2022 KB5063880 (2025-08 Cumulative Update) Server 2025 KB5063878 (2025-08 Cumulative Update) As always, organizations should verify that their update policies align with the new servicing approach before the broader rollout reaches all supported Windows platforms later this year. In case of major problems, the EDR update can be rolled back to the inbox version stored in %ProgramFiles%\\Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection (ATP) using: MpCmdRun.exe -RevertMde -Product Edr -ToVersion Inbox For those who have access to the Microsoft 365 Admin Center portal, you can view the message here under ID MC1381119.
    • My problem with these smart scopes is that IMO they're not really an entrance into astronomy, they're an entrance to looking at pretty(ish) pictures that you take by essentially pressing a button and letting the scope do the work. I still maintain that getting some binoculars or a solid dedicated telescope (which doesn't have to mean expensive) and actually spending time learning the night sky and using a telescope is a much better way to actually learn. But, granted, the learning curve is a bit steeper (as it tends to be).
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
    • Dedicated
      Conjor earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      Windows Guy earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      493
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      248
    3. 3
      Steven P.
      73
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      69
    5. 5
      neufuse
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!