Jim Lawrence
accessd at shaw.ca
Thu Jan 24 13:15:28 CST 2013
Does this mean you are actully running through a remote connection off your desktop? All the banks around here uses remote methods, through Citrix, to run all their applications...printing can be tricky though as a print request, comes from head-office, where everything is hosted, back east, to a local router and is re-directed by the smarthub to the local network printers, near or on your desktop. Every printer in their entire company has a different IP address/subdomain so anyone can print to any printer the company owns or associates with, on the contenient (world?). You can imagine the problems if some IP number gets set wrong...a huge security issue. You should have no problems. ;-) Jim -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of John W Colby Sent: Thursday, January 24, 2013 5:37 AM To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving Subject: [AccessD] Citrix I got a contract for IBM over in Research Triangle Park Durham NC. They assigned me a desktop computer for now which I am given admin rights on. It run Windows XP Professional x32 and has 3 gigs of RAM. Many of the developers install everything on their desktop and work from there however the official mantra is that we are supposed to use a Citrix machine provided to us. I have never used Citrix before. Assuming it would also be Windows XP I checked this morning and imagine my surprise when it claims to be Windows 2003 R2 X64 with 4 cores and 16 gigs RAM. My question then is what does this really mean, i.e.how does Citrix work? It is it an emulation of the real machine behind it? Is the actual server a quad core with 16 gigs running Server 2003 R2 X64? Or is it a virtual machine with N cores and X gigs emulated? In any case I do not have admin rights on that machine so every time I make any change in Access which would go to the registry it holds the changes until I log off Citrix and then the next time in things are back to the original configuration. Likewise I cannot install anything myself, and getting anything installed is not a trivial task. I like to use MZ-Tools with Access, and I can install it local, but it is not on IBM's "approved vendor list" so it will never be used on the Citrix machine. Oh the joy. -- John W. Colby Reality is what refuses to go away when you do not believe in it -- AccessD mailing list AccessD at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com