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I ordered some new PCs with Intel vPro enabled on them, but now that I have them I'm not sure how to use it.

I found some old websites about using Altiris and Microsoft SMS but those are expensive and really meant for large organizations. Does anyone know of a free or cheap way to use vPro?

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  • What did you end up using?
    – Arya
    Oct 3, 2016 at 21:13

4 Answers 4

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Intel has a list of free tools at the below link:

http://communities.intel.com/docs/DOC-1171

Another option is Spiceworks, a free network monitoring/help desk/PC inventory tool. An Intel AMT plugin available to allow remote access, device sharing, and power on/off from within Spiceworks.

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From Wikipedia:

VNC-based KVM Remote Control

In vPro 6.0 PCs with embedded Intel graphics, Intel AMT embeds a proprietary VNC Server, so you can connect out-of-band using dedicated VNC-compatible Viewer technology, and have full KVM (Keyboard, Video, Mouse) capability throughout the power cycle - including uninterrupted control of the desktop when an operating system loads. Clients such as VNC Viewer Plus from RealVNC also >provide additional functionality that might make it easier to perform (and watch) certain Intel AMT operations, such as powering >the computer off and on, configuring the BIOS, and mounting a remote image (IDER).

Have you tried using a VNC Viewer to connect to these machines?

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Every Intel AMT enabled PC has a web server running on port 16992 and/or 16993 (https).

Just point your web browser to:

 http://'Intel-AMT-enabled-host':16992 

or

 https://'Intel-AMT-enabled-host':16993
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2018 Update:

UltraVNC now redirects to RealVNC. The RealVNC product you need is the Viewer Plus - the standard (and free client) does not do KVM over IP.

There is no information on TightVNC's site regarding capacity to access the VNC server running inside a vPro chip.

Other options are:

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