Quickbooks Network Setup は、現在準備中です。

QuickBooks POS network Setup design not just empowers different clients to chip away at your organization record, yet in addition makes your bookkeeping tasks proficient more than ever. The following are a few principal benefits you can harvest by arranging QBPOS on the organization:
Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) is a proprietary protocol developed by Microsoft, which provides a user with the ability to connect to another computer. RDP client software exists for most versions of Microsoft Windows as well as Linux, Unix, OS X, iOS, Android, and several other operating systems. RDP server software is incorporated into most Windows operating systems; an RDP server for Unix and OS X also exists.

Currently Microsoft refers to their RDP server software as Remote Desktop Services (RDS), formerly "Terminal Services" (Terminal Server) in Windows Server 2008 and earlier Windows server software. RDS is a thin client implementation, where Windows software and the entire desktop of the computer running RDS, becomes accessible to the remote client computer supporting RDP. With RDS, only software user interfaces are transferred to the client system. All input from the client system is transmitted to the server, where software execution takes place.

Even today the server component of RDS is Terminal Server which is entrusted with restricting remote clients according to the level of access that has been established for them. The Terminal Server also enforces the configured software restriction policies, so as to restrict the availability of specified software to only a certain remote users. One of the real benefits of RDS is the creation of a new windows user session for every RDP connection, this permits multiple RDS sessions be running simultaneously on a single RDP machine. QuickBooks Enterprise was designed to take advantage of this capability.

Remote Desktop Connection (RDC), also called Remote Desktop (formerly Microsoft Terminal Services Client) is the client application for RDS. It allows a user to remotely log into a networked computer running RDS. RDC presents the desktop interface of the remote system, as if it were being accessed locally.

RemoteApp is a special mode of RDS, which became available in Windows Server 2008 R2 and later, where remote session configuration is integrated into the client operating system. The RemoteApp User-interface is facilitated in a window on the local desktop and appears like any other window for local applications thus making remote applications behave like local applications. Under RemoteApp the task of establishing the remote session, as well as redirecting local resources to the remote application, becomes transparent to the end user. Most users think they are simply launching an application, like any other on their desktop, even if that application is actually running on a server half-way around the world.