
Just do a search for Microsoft Remote Desktop, get and install it. Microsoft Remote Desktop is free, and in the Apple App Store. You can go from a Mac to Windows (or some Linux) computers using the Remote Desktop application, but not to another Mac. Note that it will not let you connect to another Apple Mac, as macOS does not support the Remote Desktop Protocol. While primarily designed for accessing a Windows machine, it will work with most computers that support the RDP (Remote Desktop Protocol) such as many Linux distros. On my MacBook (although this would work on any Apple machine running macOS, such as a Mac Mini), the Microsoft Remote Desktop application is a fantastic program for remoting to another computer. It’s very convenient for me to be able to remote into another computer from whichever computer I happen to be on. If you are running any version of MacOS before Big Sur, avoid it at all costs if you're running Bug Sur, sadly you're stuck with it.I use many computers in my daily life, including Windows, Apple Mac’s, and Linux computers running a variety of distros. This does all of the same stuff, but the glitches reduce productivity. Basically, the previous generation of this program worked much better.


Stealing focus across multiple screens, so that all windows activate, rather than simply the screen that you're working in, meaning that anything running on the native computer gets bumped off of the screen until you minimise windows. There are too many OS glitches, with the menu bar randomly disappearing from the top of the screen, pointer and screen items misaligning semi-regularly as the window jumps into a slightly incorrect postiion on the screen, but the pointer remains correctly orientated so that they are a few pixels out with each other. If you are on Catalina, do not upgrade to this. The latest version is not nearly as stable as the now-superseded earlier versions, which will not work with MacOS Big Sur.
