Thank you for the question @Anonymous!
Posting some additional info on this topic for reference. The following Revit Blog post has more details on these options (Cloud Worksharing / Remote Desktop): Remote working with Revit
The linked article (from the blog above) Options for Remote Access in Revit has more options (Revit Server / Citrix).
If your users have systems in the office, then Remote Desktop (or some other remote access solution) as @syman2000 mentioned would probably be the easiest option.
However, if your users are working with systems (most commonly laptops) which they’ve taken home (i.e. no user systems in the office), then this will not work as well.
Some things to keep in mind when considering Revit Server:
- Revit Server’s design intent was to extend worksharing workflows to work between offices within a single company.
- The normal setup would have an Accelerator (running on a Windows file server) in each office to improve local model creation and synchronize times.
- However, as Accelerator is not required it would be possible for users to connect to the office network and work with the Revit Server models (they may see reduced performance on synchronize and create local operations due to the lack of an Accelerator).
- Revit Server is a MS IIS application server, which requires familiarity with IIS, and additional IT maintenance / overhead compared to file-based worksharing or cloud worksharing.
Note: If possible, I would suggest avoiding the use of File-based worksharing (the regular type, that isn’t Revit Server or Cloud worksharing) across an Internet/WAN connection as it isn’t designed for this environment and doesn’t have the necessary protections put in place (like Revit Server or Cloud Worksharing) to prevent corruption or loss of data when there are network hang-ups or interruptions.
Lance Coffey
Technical Support Specialist