James,
I use two products that may meet your requirements.
1. The RPM product is an LPD gateway into the Windows world, letting you
print plaintext reports to Windows laser printers.
http://www.brooksnet.com/printserver.html
2. The OctoTools print processor accepts input from RPM and gives you
Thank you Ken and David, you both had the correct answer.
Michael Golden
Information Technology Manager
Unique Fabricating Inc.
Ken Wallis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
08/22/2007 07:45 PM
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A question for the group:
I'm looking for assistance with what I believe is a permissions issue.
I'm attempting to move an application from one server to another (old
server is Unidata 6.1 on Digital Unix 4.0e, new server is Unidata 7.1.1 on
Tru64 5.1B-4 fully patched).
The application runs
I have a year old Sun Fire x4200 server, two Dual Core Opteron 275s,
which
performed much better with UV and in general than my brand spankin' new
Dell
PowerEdge 1950, with two Xeon Woodcrests (Core 2 Duo-based). Each
machine
has 16G RAM and similar hard drive configurations. Both run Windows
Citrix Metaframe Server may be a solution for you. Your VB front-end will
run on a Windows Citrix server, and it can be accessed by a thin client or
even a browser on most platforms. Mac Citrix clients are available for
both PowerPC and OS X.
--
Michael Golden
Unique Fabricating Inc
We do a disk-to-disk-to-tape backup to minimize the amount of quiet time
required from the live data files, and we schedule the backup to coincide
with the workers' scheduled break.
Michael Golden
Unique Fabricating Inc
---
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To
Susan,
You didn't mention what operating systems you were dealing with, but I had
a similar situation with Unix and found the following to be quite
effective:
1. tar the data into a single tar archive file
2. gzip the archive file (I got 6:1 compression ratio on top of the tar
compression)
3.
Susan,
You didn't mention what operating systems you were dealing with, but I had
a similar situation with Unix and found the following to be quite
effective:
1. tar the data into a single tar archive file
2. gzip the archive file (I got 6:1 compression ratio on top of the tar
compression)
3.