AaronPower
MIS
I have a Microsoft Windows Server 2003 with Terminal Services enabled. I set the language option to "English (Australian)", and the locale to "Australia" during the original Install, and made sure that these changes were applied to the default user profile.
When a pristine user account logs into the local console, then the user will inherit the default user profile and see only the English (Aust) language. Spelling checker works correctly, and there is no option for a language selection (since there is only one language).
This user can log on and off from the local console, and all settings are retained.
However, as soon as this user logs in through an RDP session, the English (US) language is added to the profile, and is set to be the defualt. You can manually go through the control panel and set English (Aust) back to be the default, but you have to do this on every subsequent RDP login.
At this stage I am using a Windows 2000 SP4 Professional client (running version 5.1 of the MS RDP Client), but once the server goes into final production it will use a combination of Windows XP SP1 and Wyse thin clients. The behaviour may be different with those clients, but I won't be able to test that until it goes in at the client site - and that is not the time I want to be admitting that I can't set the language options correctly.
Any thoughts appreciated.
Aaron Power.
When a pristine user account logs into the local console, then the user will inherit the default user profile and see only the English (Aust) language. Spelling checker works correctly, and there is no option for a language selection (since there is only one language).
This user can log on and off from the local console, and all settings are retained.
However, as soon as this user logs in through an RDP session, the English (US) language is added to the profile, and is set to be the defualt. You can manually go through the control panel and set English (Aust) back to be the default, but you have to do this on every subsequent RDP login.
At this stage I am using a Windows 2000 SP4 Professional client (running version 5.1 of the MS RDP Client), but once the server goes into final production it will use a combination of Windows XP SP1 and Wyse thin clients. The behaviour may be different with those clients, but I won't be able to test that until it goes in at the client site - and that is not the time I want to be admitting that I can't set the language options correctly.
Any thoughts appreciated.
Aaron Power.