Dmitry Chapyshev is an independent developer whose open-source Aspia project delivers a self-contained ecosystem for secure remote access and lightweight systems administration. The portfolio is built around three complementary tools that share a common network protocol: Aspia Host runs as a background service on the Windows machine to be managed, exposing its desktop and file system to authenticated peers; Aspia Client provides on-demand connectivity for help-desk or spontaneous support scenarios, delivering full graphical control, clipboard sync and multi-threaded file transfer; Aspia Console caters to IT staff who need persistent organization, letting them build hierarchical address books, store encrypted credentials, group machines by location or function and push simultaneous updates or commands. Together the trio covers the classic remote-desktop triangle—unattended server maintenance, ad-hoc user assistance and centralized asset oversight—without the licensing overhead of commercial counterparts. Typical use cases span small-office troubleshooting, classroom lab supervision, volunteer tech-support teams and personal remote gaming rigs, all secured by user-defined RSA/AES key pairs and optional two-factor tokens. Because the components are portable and protocol-compatible, an administrator can mix and match versions across sites while keeping traffic inside a private LAN or tunneling it through NAT. All of Chapyshev’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are supplied through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always fetch the latest upstream release and support batch installation of multiple applications.

Aspia Client

Remote desktop and file transfer tool. Allows you to connect to and control Hosts.

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Aspia Console

Remote desktop and file transfer tool. Allows you to create address books, add computers to them and group them. It also allows you to manage computers and routers.

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Aspia Host

Remote desktop and file transfer tool. Allows accepts incoming connections from Clients and Consoles to manage the computer on which it is installed.

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