M
Morten
Guest
Hi,
I'm trying to figure out what (if anything) I gain by setting up W2K3
Enterprise Edition (X86) compared to the Standard Edition.
My understanding is that it's difficult to utilize more than 4 GB RAM when
the applications we use are primarily 32-bit ones. 90% of our users use only
MS Office 2003/2007. Is this correct or can we use /AWE /PAE /3GB to use
more RAM on the server?
EE has support for TS Session Directory which is an advantage in a load
balanced environment. It's my understanding that this requires a 3. party
product to actually work since the built-in load balancing mechanism in
Windows Server doesn't take the amount of users on each server into account.
Is this correct?
We currently try to avoid using X64 on our terminal servers because of
problems with printer drivers. This will probably change when we switch to
W2K8 at some point.
Thanks in advance for your views on these questions.
Morten
I'm trying to figure out what (if anything) I gain by setting up W2K3
Enterprise Edition (X86) compared to the Standard Edition.
My understanding is that it's difficult to utilize more than 4 GB RAM when
the applications we use are primarily 32-bit ones. 90% of our users use only
MS Office 2003/2007. Is this correct or can we use /AWE /PAE /3GB to use
more RAM on the server?
EE has support for TS Session Directory which is an advantage in a load
balanced environment. It's my understanding that this requires a 3. party
product to actually work since the built-in load balancing mechanism in
Windows Server doesn't take the amount of users on each server into account.
Is this correct?
We currently try to avoid using X64 on our terminal servers because of
problems with printer drivers. This will probably change when we switch to
W2K8 at some point.
Thanks in advance for your views on these questions.
Morten