No we didn't. We had one machine to run the DB, and two or three that we
would use to access the DB locally. They were all similar machines in
capability, and all ran either Windows 7 or Windows 10, depending on
time frame.
bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>
On 11/1/2016 8:15 AM, Lewis Bergman wrote:
To be clear, This is not the machine running the DB. That machine will
be on the network. this is just a box to RDP into so my sales person
can run QB Enterprise remotely. Bill, do you RDP into QB?
On Tue, Nov 1, 2016 at 10:08 AM Bill Prince <part15...@gmail.com
<mailto:part15...@gmail.com>> wrote:
We ran QB Enterprise on Windows 7 and Windows 10 (both 64 bit).
4GB RAM is probably shy; would recommend 8 at least. The disk
space is probably shy too.
bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>
On 11/1/2016 7:53 AM, Lewis Bergman wrote:
This is a bright group so I wanted to see if this is something
worth doing or maybe worth avoiding. I really don't want to get
Windows server 2012 and try to figure out the while terminal
services thing with licensing. I was thinking it might just be
easier since I only need one or two people to remote in just to
get some headless PC's and sit them in a corner somewhere.
Probably a bad idea but any thoughts?
The specs from QB are:
* Windows Vista SP2, 7 SP1, 8.1 Update 1, or Windows 10(32-bit
& 64-bit)
* Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1, 2012 R2
* 2.4 GHz processor
* 4 GB of RAM
* 2.5 GB disk space recommended
* 1024x768 or higher screen resolution, extended monitor is
supported
* 4x DVD-ROM drive