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(the account-based address book and "My Desktops" list) is effectively dead on XP. The XP client cannot authenticate to AnyDesk’s modern OAuth2 servers. You will receive "SSL handshake error" or "Server returned unexpected certificate." This means no saved alias bookmarks, no two-factor authentication, and no automatic discovery of online devices.
(where you type a 9-digit AnyDesk address) still work approximately 70% of the time, provided both sides are using legacy clients. However, if the remote host is running AnyDesk v8 or later, the XP client will often fail with a vague "Connection failed: protocol mismatch." anydesk windows xp
In the graveyard of operating systems, few relics command as much lingering respect—or stubborn persistence—as Microsoft’s Windows XP. Released in 2001, extended support ended in 2014, yet millions of machines still run it, primarily in industrial settings (CNC machines, medical devices, ATMs), legacy enterprise environments, and among retro-computing enthusiasts. For these users, remote desktop software is not a luxury; it is a necessity. Enter AnyDesk, the German-born competitor to TeamViewer, which has long maintained a unique—if fragile—relationship with Microsoft’s aging behemoth. The Technical Tightrope: AnyDesk’s XP Client AnyDesk version 6.3.2 (and its immediate predecessors) represents the final "official" build compatible with Windows XP Service Pack 3. This client is a fascinating piece of software archaeology. Unlike many modern remote tools that abandoned XP after the deprecation of modern TLS standards and graphics drivers, AnyDesk’s core architecture—specifically its proprietary DeskRT codec—was lightweight enough to function on XP’s single-core, low-RAM limitations. (the account-based address book and "My Desktops" list)