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


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