B
Brian
I have some users that regularly refuse to log off their RDP sessions and
leave me wondering at midnight whether they are still working when I need to
do a server update.
Is there a way to force an idle timeout for RDP? All PC's are XP Pro in a
Windows 2003 domain.
I would like to impose a 1-hour-idle force-logoff for RDP sessions (except
for administrators, just to throw a wrinkle into the matter - all the other
users are just Users or Power Users). I don't want the force-logoff to apply
to me as a system admin.
I know the server-side AD user profiles has user-level session settings, but
I do not know if this can be made to apply to their station RDP logins or
just true TS logons. Also, I have seen the Session settings fail to log users
off (or perhaps just fail to detect idle time correctly).
leave me wondering at midnight whether they are still working when I need to
do a server update.
Is there a way to force an idle timeout for RDP? All PC's are XP Pro in a
Windows 2003 domain.
I would like to impose a 1-hour-idle force-logoff for RDP sessions (except
for administrators, just to throw a wrinkle into the matter - all the other
users are just Users or Power Users). I don't want the force-logoff to apply
to me as a system admin.
I know the server-side AD user profiles has user-level session settings, but
I do not know if this can be made to apply to their station RDP logins or
just true TS logons. Also, I have seen the Session settings fail to log users
off (or perhaps just fail to detect idle time correctly).