JPolazzo
07-05-2006, 04:16 PM
Hello all,
I have been searching and google'ing my brains out and I cant find any
best/recommended practices for configuring AntiVirus on a 2003 Terminal
server (or its clients if thats the recommendation) that is providing desktop
capability to clients (thin and not so thin ;-)
Anyone know of such a .doc?
TIA
-JP
Patrick Rouse
07-07-2006, 04:16 AM
http://www.sessioncomputing.com/anti-virus.htm
Each product is configured differently, and the vendor should provide
instructions in their online manuals.
--
Patrick Rouse
Microsoft MVP - Terminal Server
http://www.sessioncomputing.com
"JPolazzo" wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I have been searching and google'ing my brains out and I cant find any
> best/recommended practices for configuring AntiVirus on a 2003 Terminal
> server (or its clients if thats the recommendation) that is providing desktop
> capability to clients (thin and not so thin ;-)
>
>
> Anyone know of such a .doc?
>
> TIA
>
> -JP
JPolazzo
07-07-2006, 01:32 PM
"Patrick Rouse" wrote:
> http://www.sessioncomputing.com/anti-virus.htm
>
> Each product is configured differently, and the vendor should provide
> instructions in their online manuals.
Thanks for the link!
I was wondering what you mean by compatible. Does this mean that the scanner
will find viruses in memory, such as IE browsing and user terminal sessions,
or rather that it just wont break the server?
-JP<who is searching the vendor website as well>
Patrick Rouse
07-07-2006, 03:12 PM
Both, but mostly that it won't break TS, load a separate notification area
program for each session...
Which one do you have, or are you considering?
--
Patrick Rouse
Microsoft MVP - Terminal Server
http://www.sessioncomputing.com
"JPolazzo" wrote:
>
>
> "Patrick Rouse" wrote:
>
> > http://www.sessioncomputing.com/anti-virus.htm
> >
> > Each product is configured differently, and the vendor should provide
> > instructions in their online manuals.
>
>
> Thanks for the link!
>
> I was wondering what you mean by compatible. Does this mean that the scanner
> will find viruses in memory, such as IE browsing and user terminal sessions,
> or rather that it just wont break the server?
>
> -JP<who is searching the vendor website as well>