User manual

Table Of Contents
Use a Local IME with Remote Applications
When using non-English keyboards and locales, you can use an IME (input method editor) installed in your
local system to send non-English characters to a remote hosted application.
You can also use the Input menu in the menu bar on your Mac or keyboard shortcuts to switch to a dierent
IME. No IME is required to be installed in the remote RDS host.
N On a Mac, an IME is referred to as an input source.
When this feature is turned on, the local IME is used. If an IME is installed and congured on the RDS host
where the remote application is installed, that remote IME is ignored.
Prerequisites
n
Verify that one or more IMEs are installed in the client system.
n
Verify that View Agent 6.1.1 or later, or Horizon Agent 7.0 or later, is installed on the RDS host.
Procedure
1 In the desktop and application selection window of Horizon Client, Control-click a remote application
and select .
2 In the Remote Applications pane that appears, select the Extend the local IME to hosted applications
check box.
3 Use the local IME as you would with any locally installed applications.
The Input menu appears in the menu bar on your Mac client system. When you are using a remote
application, you can switch to a dierent language or IME by using the Input menu or keyboard shortcuts.
Key combinations that perform certain actions, such as Command-C to copy and Command-V to paste, will
still work correctly.
Saving Documents in a Remote Application
With certain remote applications, such as Microsoft Word or WordPad, you can create and save documents.
Where these documents are saved depends on your company's network environment. For example, your
documents might be saved to a home share mounted on your local computer.
Administrators can use an ADMX template le to set a group policy that species where documents are
saved. This policy is called Set Remote Desktop Services User Home Directory. For more information, see
the Conguring Remote Desktop Features in Horizon 7 document.
Printing from a Remote Desktop or Application
From a remote desktop, you can print to a virtual printer or to a USB printer that is aached to your client
computer. Virtual printing and USB printing work together without conict.
You can use the virtual printing feature with the following types of remote desktops and applications:
n
Remote desktops that run Windows Server operating systems
n
Session-based desktops (on virtual machine RDS hosts)
n
Remote hosted applications
Chapter 4 Using a Microsoft Windows Desktop or Application on a Mac
VMware, Inc. 61