Local Drive access...

J

Joe

Good day,

I am looking to give my users access to their local drives
while logged onto their terminal server. I am running
w2k, so it is not natively supported (without an ICA
client, that is). I tried the TSDropCopy util and
couldn't seem to get it working properly. As well, in the
W2k Resource Kit it has a DRMAPSRV and DRMAPCLT app which
is also suppose to give you access to your local drives
(with the proper registry entries); couldn't get that to
work either. Does anyone have a good reliable solution
for this issue (besides going to 2003, which is not ab
option at this point)?

Thanks for any help!

- Joe
 
G

Guest

Can you elaborate on the problems you had with TSDropCopy

Another program is WtsFtp by Ibex Software
http://www.workthin.com/tsao.ht

Patrick Rous
Microsoft MVP - Terminal Serve
http://www.workthin.co

----- Joe wrote: ----

Good day

I am looking to give my users access to their local drives
while logged onto their terminal server. I am running
w2k, so it is not natively supported (without an ICA
client, that is). I tried the TSDropCopy util and
couldn't seem to get it working properly. As well, in the
W2k Resource Kit it has a DRMAPSRV and DRMAPCLT app which
is also suppose to give you access to your local drives
(with the proper registry entries); couldn't get that to
work either. Does anyone have a good reliable solution
for this issue (besides going to 2003, which is not ab
option at this point)

Thanks for any help

- Joe
 
J

Joe

Hi Patrick,

I loaded TSDropCopy on the server as well as the TS
client. I started the software but was not able to
understand how it actually worked. I wasn't sure if I ran
the copy process on the local PC, or fired it up when
logged onto the terminal server. It also seemed like it
wouldn't allow me to select where to copy the file on the
server. To be truthful I am a bit embarassed as to why I
can't seem to understand this process, as I am a MCSE and
MCNE and have been in the industry for quite a while!

- Joe
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top