I've found in my admittedly limited experience that it may be impossible to
correctly install the 64 bit drivers on the 32 bit host so the 64 bit client
can download them an connect. It is easier going the other way around.
> On Jun 24, 2014, at 9:02, Jeff Johnson wrote:
>
>> On 6/24/2014 8:5
On 6/24/2014 8:58 AM, Paul McNett wrote:
Let me guess. One machine is 64 bit and the other 32?
Paul
On Jun 24, 2014, at 6:25, Jeff Johnson wrote:
On 6/24/2014 6:22 AM, Peter Cushing wrote:
Jeff Johnson wrote:
I have a customer that is using remote desktop locally on a "server". The
"ser
Let me guess. One machine is 64 bit and the other 32?
Paul
> On Jun 24, 2014, at 6:25, Jeff Johnson wrote:
>
>
>> On 6/24/2014 6:22 AM, Peter Cushing wrote:
>> Jeff Johnson wrote:
>>> I have a customer that is using remote desktop locally on a "server". The
>>> "server" is a Windows 7 comput
On 6/24/2014 6:22 AM, Peter Cushing wrote:
Jeff Johnson wrote:
I have a customer that is using remote desktop locally on a
"server". The "server" is a Windows 7 computer. They have a printer
on their workstation (Windows 8) that has a printer connected to a
USB. It is a Brother with all of
Jeff Johnson wrote:
I have a customer that is using remote desktop locally on a "server".
The "server" is a Windows 7 computer. They have a printer on their
workstation (Windows 8) that has a printer connected to a USB. It is
a Brother with all of the software installed. The printer and sca
I have a customer that is using remote desktop locally on a "server".
The "server" is a Windows 7 computer. They have a printer on their
workstation (Windows 8) that has a printer connected to a USB. It is a
Brother with all of the software installed. The printer and scanner
work fine local
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