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I know you said you're biased against it, but TeamViewer is dead easy and completely free for noncommercial use. Sometimes the normie way is the best way, especially when it comes to the tech illiterate. Similarly, Chrome Remote Desktop looks very handholdy. I haven't used it in many years, so I can't personally recommend it, but I've heard good things.
You could also start a call on your preferred conferencing software, send them a link, and have them share their screen. Downside is you can't control their computer directly. Zoom has a really cool annotation feature where you can draw on the sharer's screen and they're able to see it. I haven't seen other conferencing software with that feature, but I haven't looked very hard.
TeamViewer blocked me for using it commercially. I have no idea why, I'm only using it to support 3 family members.
Yeah, they do that. I was using it on three machines within my own home and got flagged for "commercial usage". I requested to be whitelisted and it stopped for a while but came back. Between that and the software randomly uninstalling itself from one of my machines it's just not worth it. Went back to UVNC.
I had that happen once too, but they unblocked me after I opened a ticket and I haven't had a problem since. That was maybe 5+ years ago.
Yup... I was using it to occasionally fix a headless Windows computer in my house (basically my own, LAN based GeForce now using moonlight so I can play any Windows game from Linux ... Sunshine on the Windows side occasionally needs upgraded and/or something needs fixed so Moonlight itself wasn't enough).
Anyways, I needed to fix something one day, Moonlight wasn't working and TeamViewer locked me out for "commercial use" ... I ended up just upgrading the Windows computer from 11 Home to 11 Pro and configuring RDP (Remmina is the client I use on the Linux side).
It works way better, Moonlight for most things and RDP (built into the operating system) for when something breaks.
For anything where TeamViewer locking you out is a high risk of disruption, I wouldn't trust them to honor their non-commercial use commitment.