Mochasoft TN3270 access from 2 systems - emulation

I have a mainframe emulator 'Mochasoft TN3270' installed in my learning centre.
I have installed Mochasoft TN3270 in my windows 7 laptop too.
Both versions are trial for a period of 30 days.
I have a username and password to access the server in my learning centre through an IP.
Can I use the same IP,username,password to access the emulator from my home laptop?
Will it conflict with the usage from my learning centre?

The user and password are the MainFrame user/password, and not the MochaSoft terminal software.
There shouldn't be a problem accessing the MainFrame via other computer.
If you are looking for a non limited emulator,S3270 is an open source terminal software, which provide similar functionality to MochaSoft without trial limitation.

Related

Controlling old manufacturing PC with new PC

I'm going to ask the question very generically, please bare with me.
The current setup I'm working with is Old (Linux) Computer in office controlling $millions worth of equipment in Fab. Due to firewalls/Computer being very old, we can't remote desktop to the machine - replacements and modification to current system are not an option. Many problems that come up can be solved in 10 minutes, but require a 30 min commute to the office.
Is there a way to control the input to the current system with a Modern PC? Hardwire the modern PC into the Linux system, and remote to the PC. Ideally we could remote login to the PC, and see and control the Linux system while the Linux system/Fab doesn't know anything has changed.

RDWeb problems on Windows 10 (patch 1803) - Windows in background

We're a software developer currently oferring a Cloud version of our software, hosted in a remote virtual machine. Our customers access this virtual machine via RDWeb, seeing (and working with) only the program.
Since the mentioned update (1083), our customers' computers running on Windows 10 are reporting a problem in which whenever they open a new windows in our software, that window is automatically moved to the background, behind other windows they may have opened in our software. That causes them to believe the program has crashed, and is seriously interfering with their line of work. The only common ground we've been able to find is the operating system (Windows 10) and that they had recently installed an update (specifically, the 1083 patch).
Has anyone had similar issues? If so, how have you managed to solve them?
Thanks in advance for your help and your patience
Jaime Peña
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RHEL 7 GUI access

I need a replacement browser. Currently we use Exceed to access our RHEL 6.4 box. Works pretty well.
Now, on our replacement RHEL 7.2 box, XDMCP with GDM does not work. Why is not important, but it seems to lead back to an install from the OEM. Vendors, vendors, and more vendors are working the issue. They all are telling us that XDMCP is no longer recommended.
Since I cannot arrange access for our users via our current Exceed browser, what is a good replacement for remote host access? Does anyone know what is recommended?
Requirements: Runs on Windows, GUI, Nautilus, desktop access, new terminals and GUI open quickly within the app.

Using XRDP to connect linux to Windows PC from LINUX Client

Has anyone successfully used XRDP/freeRDP to remote login to a Windows PC from a LINUX Client? I did some research on the matter and I found there may be incompatibility issues. However those posts were quite old.
I would like to use the latest XRDP or freeRDP
The site says the following:
"The goal of this project is to provide a fully functional Linux terminal server, capable of accepting connections from rdesktop, freerdp, and Microsoft's own terminal server / remote desktop clients.
Unlike Windows NT/2000/2003/2008/2012 server, xrdp will not display a Windows desktop but an X window desktop to the user.
So it sounds like I can communicate between a Linux Box and Windows. But it sounds like the Windows PC can only be the client logging into a Linux Server and not vice-versa."
Is this true?
That's not true. You can using a freeRDP client in Linux connecting to a server on Windows. I've just tried the latest freeRDP code in Ubuntu, and I've tested Win7/Win10, both are OK.
Follow the instruction of freeRDP in the following link:
https://github.com/FreeRDP/FreeRDP/wiki/Compilation
and hope you make it.
Ps: There may be some connectivity issues, like firewall or something, just google it.

Windows 8.1 - Bluescreen BUGCODE_NDIS_DRIVER

I tried to install a hardware I've installed in my previous computer under Windows 7, basically an external network card with antenna, but when I try to use it, after installed it I get this bluescreen error:
BUGCODE_NDIS_DRIVER
I don't know if it's possible to fix it, any useful information?
PS: If this isn't the best Stack forum, please guide me to the right one.
There is some technical information on Windows Dev Center - Hardware on this bugcheck. Driver developers can find the cause from the bugcheck code and parameters.
I can duplicate the BUGCODE_NDIS_DRIVER blue screen on my Windows 8.1 developer box fairly easily by opening two different VPN tunnels. Luckily, I don't need both running at the same time, so my solution is "don't do that".
For example, I open SonicWALL Global VPN Client to connect to one network. Then, I open the Cisco VPN client to connect to another. The crash happens almost immediately.
If you have two active network card, deactivate one, that is all.

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