User manual

Remote control which lets the support staff view and control a Terminal Services session. Sharing
input and display graphics between two Terminal Services sessions lets support staff diagnose and
resolve problems remotely.
Network Load Balancing (NLB), available in Windows 2000 Advanced Server and Datacenter
Server.
High color 16-bit, 24-bit, and 32-bit graphics are supported if they are also supported in the
graphics driver.
Custom high resolution supports wide screen monitors.
Clipboard sharing, also known as clipboard redirection. The local clipboard becomes a part of
the clipboard viewer chain in the remote session, allowing the user to copy and paste between
applications running in both the remote session and on the local client.
Local-printer redirection so server applications can print locally to the client device.
Local audio playback so server applications can direct audio to the client device or play at the
Terminal Server.
Local-port redirection so server applications can use parallel and COM ports of the client device.
Local drive redirection so server applications can use the file system (including ATA) of the client
device.
File redirection filter that permits exposing only specific directories. If you specify that only external
storage, such as Compact Flash or USB storage, be exposed through the redirected drive,
information is saved only to the redirected drive.
TS CAL maintenance tool. This control panel window is available in any OS design that supports
Control Panel programs, such as the Enterprise Web Pad. It requires that RDP client be in the run-
time image.
Server authentication verifies that you are connecting to the correct remote computer or server to
help prevent unintentionally exposing confidential information.
Transport Layer Security (TLS)/Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protects users from rogue servers.
Network level authentication requires user level authentication prior to establishing full RDP
connection. This may remove the need for the HP Single Login Button, as this feature allows you to
leave the thin client on the RDP logon screen indefinitely without taking server resources.
RDP runs in Graphics, Windowing, and Events Subsystem (GWES) rather than in its own process
space. This provides faster display updates by reducing the protected server library (PSL) and kernel
overhead. RDP running in GWES can improve performance up to 30%.
NOTE: If you configured RDP to run in GWES, you cannot run RDP inside a Web browser.
Optionally, you can configure RDP to run in Microsoft ActiveX Control.
Terminal Emulation Connection
Terminal Emulation Connection (TEC) allows you to create a terminal emulation session for a terminal.
You can create two different types of TECs, a one-time connection, or a connection associated with a
user account.
Programs
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