Traditional VPNs make user access easy but computer management hard.TrueStack Server gives Active Directory reliable, server-initiated access to domain-joined remote machines.

The problem TrueStack solves

Most VPN platforms are designed around users, not computers.

They work well for:

  • User-initiated access
  • On-demand connections
  • Client-to-server traffic

But Active Directory depends on:

  • Persistent connectivity
  • Server-initiated communication
  • Predictable network presence

When computers are remote, traditional VPNs break these assumptions — making it difficult for AD to reliably manage the machines it’s responsible for.


What this looks like in real environments

If you manage domain-joined computers remotely, you’ve likely run into issues like:

  • Active Directory can’t reliably reach remote computers
  • Group Policy updates fail or apply inconsistently
  • PowerShell remoting works sometimes — and then doesn’t
  • Scripts, updates, and management tasks require workarounds
  • VPN configurations become more complex as device count grows

These aren’t misconfigurations. They’re structural limitations of how most VPNs are built.


Why traditional VPNs struggle with AD management

Traditional VPN platforms are typically:

  • User-initiated
  • Session-based
  • Intermittent by design
  • Optimized for client → server traffic

Active Directory expects the opposite.

It needs computers to:

  • Appear continuously on the network
  • Be reachable by domain controllers
  • Respond to server-initiated connections

When connectivity depends on users logging in, tunnels coming and going, or complex routing rules, AD management becomes unreliable.


The TrueStack approach

TrueStack Server changes the model.

It creates simple, persistent network connectivity between your Active Directory environment and remote computers, so those computers behave as if they are on the local network — even when they aren’t.

With TrueStack:

  • Domain controllers can initiate connections to remote computers
  • Group Policy, scripts, and admin tools work normally
  • Remote computers maintain predictable network presence
  • You avoid complex per-device VPN configuration

This isn’t about adding features to a VPN.
It’s about using the right network architecture for how Active Directory actually works.


Designed for scale, not exceptions

As remote device counts increase, VPN complexity usually grows with them:

  • More tunnels
  • More rules
  • More exceptions
  • More failure points

TrueStack keeps the model simple.

  • One server
  • Persistent encrypted connectivity
  • Clean routing
  • No brittle workarounds

This makes it easier to manage tens or hundreds of domain-joined computers without constantly tuning the VPN itself.


Full control over where and how it runs

TrueStack Server is:

  • Self-hosted — deploy it in your own cloud or network
  • Fully controlled by you — no shared infrastructure
  • Simple to manage — no licensing gymnastics as you scale

You decide:

  • Where it runs
  • How it’s secured
  • How many computers connect

No artificial limits. No surprise pricing changes.


Predictable pricing at scale

Most VPN platforms price per user or per device — which makes costs rise quickly as remote fleets grow.

TrueStack Server uses a simpler model.

  • Unlimited connections
  • Flat monthly pricing
  • No per-user or per-device fees

For $765 per month, you can connect as many remote computers as needed without reworking licenses or renegotiating contracts.

This makes TrueStack especially well-suited for:

  • Growing remote teams
  • MSPs managing multiple client environments
  • Organizations tired of VPN costs scaling faster than headcount

Designed for teams that want control, predictability, and simplicity — not another recurring service.


Is TrueStack a good fit?

TrueStack is a good fit if you:

  • Manage domain-joined computers remotely
  • Rely on Group Policy, scripts, or PowerShell
  • Need AD servers to reliably reach client machines
  • Are frustrated by VPN complexity at scale

It’s not a fit if you:

  • Are fully cloud-only with no Active Directory
  • Only need a basic user VPN
  • Don’t require centralized computer management

Talk to an Engineer (15 minutes)

If you’re struggling to manage domain-joined computers over VPN, we can help you determine whether TrueStack’s architecture is a fit for your environment.

This is a short technical conversation — not a sales pitch.

Name

A VPN Architecture That Lets Active Directory Reach Remote Computers