If wife is logged with remote desktop the machine at the shop will be locked
and wife will have control.
Jerry

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Rafael Copquin
Sent: Tuesday, August 30, 2011 4:00 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: RDT and Windows XP Prof

Maybe I wasn't clear in my first post.

This is a very small client (His store I mean, he is taller than me :-) ).

Just a store with only one computer (no network of any kind).
This computer is XP Prof and runs an invoicing system, built in VFP9SP2. 
No SQL Server as a back end.
He has an idle wife at home and wants her to update pricelists, 
products, etc. from home. Since she would be working during store hours, 
the solution is either RDT or a VPN.
I have been making tests with Hamachi but it is slow in their scenario 
(low band width), and I have been using RDT with Windows Server 2003 
very successfully with other clients, so I am confident with it. Because 
this is a small client (ie, very little money and also a bit on the 
stingy side) he won't purchase Windows Server. So I am stuck with XP Prof.
So, the situation is: employees using the one XP box to invoice 
customers over the counter and at the same time, idle wife uses computer 
from home to occupy herself productively. (perhaps this is a very 
"macho" statement, so I apologize to the women in this forum, but this 
is really the case)

So, there you have it

Regards

Rafael





El 30/08/2011 9:05, Charlie Coleman escribió:
> At 08:34 AM 8/30/2011 -0300, Rafael Copquin wrote:
>> Thanks for the input. I'll try this
> ...
>> El 30/08/2011 6:11, Alan Bourke escribió:
>>> http://lmgtfy.com/?q=xp+multiple+rdp+registry+hack
>>>
> ...
> It looks like you got your answer, but this perked my curiosity.
>
> If the controlling computer is on the same network, why wouldn't you just
> do the updates from that computer? If I recall, you said they were
updating
> databases, etc. If the database is on a database server (e.g. SQL Server,
> MySQL, PostgreSQL, etc) then the connection is probably going through ODBC
> so any computer on the network could connect. If the database is a VFP
> database (or file-based DBMS) then I'd imagine it's located on a network
> drive which should also be available to computers on the network. Or, if
> the VFP database is only on the single machine, it would be possible to
> just share/map a drive to that computer from other computers on the
network.
>
> I'm not saying any one way is right or wrong, just curious what drove you
> to RDT.
>
> -Charlie
>
>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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