If everyone on the network is connected to the Terminal Server do i need to have packet prioritization? If i do is it just to give printing a lower priority?
Does not matter if everyone is connected to the TS. Once they connect to the TS, if they launch IE or Outlook you now have HTTP and email traffic, all this with RDP.
Unless you use something to guarantee a minimum for RDP, web browsing from the TS (in this example) may end up using all the bandwidth, greatly reducing the overall RDP experience.
Printing will go through the RDP channel (assuming you use RDP printing redirection) and in this case there is no way to assign different priorities.
The Microsoft Server topic includes all of the legacy versions of the operating system, including the Windows NT 3.1, NT 3.5, NT 4.0 and Windows 2000 and Windows Home Server versions.
ASKER
If everyone on the network is connected to the Terminal Server do i need to have packet prioritization? If i do is it just to give printing a lower priority?