Mobility today is huge. People want to access their office computers from home, vacation (ug), or pretty much anywhere they might be. We are becoming a more mobile-ready society and even a mobile-first society in many ways.
The pandemic in 2020 really amplified remote work as a legitimate substitute to working in an office.
There's lots of ways to remotely access your office computer and network. The solution you choose must be tailored to your specific needs. There's not just a single "remote access" solution that you can buy and install.
In this article, we'll discuss the major divisions in the remote access landscape and discuss the pros and cons of these various methods. And with these pros and cons in mind, we'll discuss which remote access method would be indicated for a particular use case.

Our interconnected blue marble
Retail-level, consumer-oriented remote control tools like LogMeIn, GoToMyPC, TeamViewer, and most others, work by doing KVM capture and redirect. wut? KVM stands for Keyboard Video Mouse. Your keyboard and mouse interactions are transmitted securely to the far end (the host you are remoting into) and, likewise, the contents of the display on the far end is scraped and transmitted back to you on the near end (remote). If the internet service on both ends is decent, it can almost be like sitting directly in front of the far end computer.
I use this technology when helping my clients remotely. If a picture is worth a thousands words then live action is worth a hundred thousand words. I can investigate and fix problems far faster when I can remote into a distant computer. Of course, the computer must be working well enough to access the internet, but often that is the case.
Pros
Cons
Most 3rd party KVM-redirection based remote products, like the ones mentioned above, charge a subscription fee, usually several hundred dollars per year. They're also more limited in how exactly you can configure the remote end. e.g. If have two monitors at home but only one monitor at work, that second home monitor cannot be used to extend to the host end.
Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) is the gold standard for remote access into a Windows host. It's a 1st party product that's baked right into Windows so nothing to install and it's free!
RDP offers far and away the best remote experience with features that no 3rd party product can match. The main reason that people buy 3rd party products and not just use RDP is lack of awareness and not knowing how to safely and securely set up RDP. And, to be honest, RDP is not a simple "turn it on" solution. It takes a bit of geeky knowhow to get it right. That's where I come in.
Pros
Cons
RDP is by far the most common remote solution I set up for my clients.
VPN means Virtual Private Network. No, it's not the same kind of VPN that some people use to hide their IP address or make it appear they're in another country so they can evade some streaming service's regional blocking.
This kind of VPN is used to connect a remote computer, like your computer at home, to your office network as though it was physically at the office.
It's a remote access system that allows your near end (remote) computer to actually join the host computer's LAN (Local Area Network). The office LAN is extended to the remote end via a "secure tunnel". Using this method, your work actually takes place on the remote end, where you are, and not on a host end computer. e.g. If you are editing a Word document, that editing takes place on the remote end.
VPN solutions are indicated mainly for connecting the LANs in distant offices together into a single network. e.g. A company with two or three area offices might connect them together via VPN in order to share a common database, real time applications, or a shared network folder (although there are other ways to share a folder).
A VPN solution like this one is generally suboptimum for 1-to-1 remote participants to access to host computers at the office. The reasons are fairly technical and beyond the scope of this article to explain.
Pros
Cons
Often times, business people really only need access to company files that may be on a server or their workstation. And maybe they'll want this access anywhere without necessarily being connected to the office network or even the internet. When clients discuss needing remote access or mobile functionality, this is often the method they (unknowingly) need even if they don't articulate it as such.
Pros
Cons
This is where a discussion of your needs is necessary. The outline above may give you some idea of the methods available but without a discussion and analysis of your needs, it's not possible to conclusively recommend a particular method.
Having said that, most of my clients get along with method 1b using RDP. Some use method 3. Rarely do I implement method 2.
Sometimes, no one single method is best for everything that a client needs to do. I may recommend multiple methods, using whatever method that most efficiently addresses a particular need. In this case, I usually recommend method 1b for database or real time application sharing and method 3 for standalone file access such as Word, Excel, PDFs, etc.
Options today are more plentiful, diverse, and capable than ever before. WFH, kicked into high gear by the 2020 pandemic, is definitely a growing trend. There's never been a better time to investigate and possibly implement a mobile-capable ecosystem for yourself and/or your company. But it must be done right.