
This is a reposting of an article I originally wrote on my Developing for Dynamics GP blog.
This is an update to the original Using Named Printers with Terminal Server post from August 2008.

This is a reposting of an article I originally wrote on my Developing for Dynamics GP blog.
This is an update to the original Using Named Printers with Terminal Server post from August 2008.

This is a reposting of an article Dave Dusek originally wrote on my Developing for Dynamics GP blog.
This blog post is about a difficult Visual Studio Tools for Microsoft Dynamics GP (VSTools) performance issue that I had on a citrix server environment. What I’m going to do is list the symptoms that I received in the case and then the troubleshooting that we did to narrow down the situation and the results of that. So what the case started with was the following:

This is a reposting of an article I originally wrote on my Developing for Dynamics GP blog.
Microsoft Dynamics GP remembers the last user to use the application and defaults the User ID into the login window next time the application is loaded. This is useful when only a single user uses the specific workstation install. In a Terminal Server or Citrix environment, multiple users use a single workstation install and so it would preferable if the User ID was left blank when the application launches.