Citrix Systems 1.8 Server User Manual


 
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u The Citrix ICA Client for Macintosh. Use this client for 68030/040 and
PowerPC-based Apple Macintosh computers.
u
The Citrix ICA Client for UNIX is available in the following versions:
u Linux RedHat 5.0 and above
u SCO UnixWare 7 (UnixWare 2.1 and OpenServer 5 with the Binary
Compatibility Module from SCO)
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Hewlett Packard HP-UX 10.20 and above
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Sun Solaris 2.5.1 and above
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Sun SunOS 4.1.4
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Silicon Graphics IRIX 6.3 and above
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Digital UNIX 3.2 and above
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IBM AIX 4.1.4 and above
u The Citrix ICA Windows Web Clients support application launching with
Windows-based Web browsers that support configurable MIME types. Many
Web browsers also support application embedding, including Microsoft
Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator.
u
The Citrix ICA Client for Java supports application embedding with Web
browsers that fully implement Java Virtual Machine (JVM) Version 1.1 or
greater.
Citrix continually updates its support for client platforms and versions. See the
Citrix Web site for information on new ICA Clients. For more information on
supported platforms, see the Citrix ICA Client Administrator’s Guides for the
clients you plan to deploy.
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TAPI support for Win32 Clients. The ICA Win32 client now provides TAPI
support for dial-up connections. Users no longer need to manage separate
modem entries for their local communications programs and the ICA Client.
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TAPI emulation for DOS and Win16 Clients. Citrix ICA Clients for DOS
and Win16 can now reap the benefits of today’s state-of-the-art modems by
interpreting Windows 95/Windows NT modem configuration files into legacy
.ini files to ensure optimum performance for dial-up users.
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International keyboard support for Web Clients. Users worldwide can
exploit the benefits of Citrix ICA Clients for Internet Explorer and Netscape
Navigator, both of which now support international keyboard layouts.
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256 color DOS Client support. No longer are DOS ICA Client users limited
to just 16 colors. With this new enhancement, users can enjoy the quality and
richness of 256 color applications and graphics on legacy DOS devices.