-
-  | Adobe Acrobat Pro (X) |
-  | Adobe Acrobat Reader (DC) |
-
-
-  | Adobe After Effects (CC) |
-
-
-  | Adobe Audition (CC) |
-  | Adobe Bridge (CS6, CC) |
-
-
-  | Adobe Creative Cloud (CC) |
-  | Adobe Illustrator (CC) |
-
-
-  | Adobe InDesign (CC) |
-  | Adobe Lightroom (CC) |
-
-
-  | Adobe Photoshop (CS6, CC) |
-  | Adobe Premiere Pro (CC) |
-
-
-  | Command Prompt (cmd.exe) |
-  | Explorer (File Manager) |
-
-
-  | Internet Explorer (11) |
-  | Microsoft Access (2016, 2019, o365) |
-
-
-  | Microsoft Excel (2016, 2019, o365) |
-  | Microsoft Word (2016, 2019, o365) |
-
-
-  | Microsoft OneNote (2016, 2019, o365) |
-  | Microsoft Outlook (2016, 2019, o365) |
-
-
-  | Microsoft PowerPoint (2016, 2019, o365) |
-  | Microsoft Publisher (2016, 2019, o365) |
-
-
-  | Powershell |
-
-
-  | Windows (Full RDP session) |
- | |
-
-
-
-## Installation
-
-### Step 1: Set up a Windows Virtual Machine
-The best solution for running a VM as a subsystem for WinApps would be KVM. KVM is a CPU and memory-efficient virtualization engine bundled with most major Linux distributions. To set up the VM for WinApps, follow this guide:
-
-- [Creating a Virtual Machine in KVM](docs/KVM.md)
-
-If you already have a Virtual Machine or server you wish to use with WinApps, you will need to merge `kvm/RDPApps.reg` into the VM's Windows Registry. If this VM is in KVM and you want to use auto-IP detection, you will need to name the machine `RDPWindows`. Directions for both of these can be found in the guide linked above.
-
-### Step 2: Download the repo and prerequisites
-To get things going, use:
-``` bash
-sudo apt-get install -y freerdp2-x11
-git clone https://github.com/Fmstrat/winapps.git
-cd winapps
-```
-### Step 3: Creating your WinApps configuration file
-You will need to create a `~/.config/winapps/winapps.conf` configuration file with the following information in it:
-``` bash
-RDP_USER="MyWindowsUser"
-RDP_PASS="MyWindowsPassword"
-#RDP_DOMAIN="MYDOMAIN"
-#RDP_IP="192.168.123.111"
-#RDP_SCALE=100
-#RDP_FLAGS=""
-#MULTIMON="true"
-#DEBUG="true"
-```
-The username and password should be a full user account and password, such as the one created when setting up Windows or a domain user. It cannot be a user/PIN combination as those are not valid for RDP access.
-
-Options:
-- When using a pre-existing non-KVM RDP server, you can use the `RDP_IP` to specify it's location
-- If you are running a VM in KVM with NAT enabled, leave `RDP_IP` commented out and WinApps will auto-detect the right local IP
-- For domain users, you can uncomment and change `RDP_DOMAIN`
-- On high-resolution (UHD) displays, you can set `RDP_SCALE` to the scale you would like [100|140|160|180]
-- To add flags to the FreeRDP call, such as `/audio-mode:1` to pass in a mic, use the `RDP_FLAGS` configuration option
-- For multi-monitor setups, you can try enabling `MULTIMON`, however if you get a black screen (FreeRDP bug) you will need to revert back
-- If you enable `DEBUG`, a log will be created on each application start in `~/.local/share/winapps/winapps.log`
-
-### Step 4: Run the WinApps installer
-Lastly, check that FreeRDP can connect with:
-```
-bin/winapps check
-```
-You will see output from FreeRDP, as well as potentially have to accept the initial certificate. After that, a Windows Explorer window should pop up. You can close this window and press `Ctrl-C` to cancel out of FreeRDP.
-
-If this step fails, try restarting the VM, or your problem could be related to:
-- You need to accept the security cert the first time you connect (with 'check')
-- Not enabling RDP in the Windows VM
-- Not being able to connect to the IP of the VM
-- Incorrect user credentials in `~/.config/winapps/winapps.conf`
-- Not merging `install/RDPApps.reg` into the VM
-
-Then the final step is to run the installer which will prompt you for a system or user install:
-``` bash
-./installer.sh
-```
-This will take you through the following process:
-
-