Bud, >Not sure if it is the same thing, but when using W2K Server, it >doesn't count as a client access unless the person connection >actually logs in using W2K Authentication.
This applies to CALs, which are never needed--indeed, they are meaningless--with Workstation products. So that's not the question we're working on, which is "What are you legally allowed to do with a Workstation product over a network?" The answer is in my original link: basically anything you want, as long as there aren't more than 10 remote computers connecting at one time. This 10-connection limit is only *functionally* enforced on certain MS Networking services (file, web and print), but there's still the *same* restriction on all other applications, either third-party or internal. Other apps are just to be used on the "honor system." Regards, Sandy Please visit http://www.ipswitch.com/support/mailing-lists.html to be removed from this list. An Archive of this list is available at: http://www.mail-archive.com/imail_forum%40list.ipswitch.com/
