Citrix Workspace app can be used on domain and non-domain joined PCs, tablets, and thin clients. Provides high performance use of virtualized Skype for Business, line of business and HDX 3D Pro engineering apps, multimedia, local app access.
This ZIP file contains sample scripts to deploy and configure Citrix Workspace app. It is an optional download, provided on an as-is basis by Citrix to serve as an example. Before use, IT administrators must customize the scripts to suit their environment. The uninstall and install scripts may be used as noted in the upgrade guide for Citrix Workspace app for Windows (CTX135933). Version: 19.11.0.50 (1911)
This ZIP file contains ADMX and ADML files to deploy and configure Citrix Workspace app using group policy object editor. It is an optional download, to be used by IT administrators, and not meant for use by end-users. The administrative templates (ADMX and ADML files) may be used as noted in the upgrade guide for Citrix Workspace app for Windows (CTX135933). Version: 19.11.0.50 (1911)
Windows 2000 build 1911 is a beta 3 build of Windows 2000. It does not offer much over previous builds. However, it does include a few oddities. It marks the beginning of the transition to the 'Beta 3' stage, with some elements being rebranded to 'Beta 3' already. However, many of the elements are not updated, and still, say 'Beta 2'. As this build was compiled a week before the changing of the name to 'Windows 2000', it retains all of its 'NT' elements. This build introduces new icons, which were also used in build 1946 before being replaced in build 1964 with the icons used in the RTM.
Windows are typically described by their number of panes (6-over-6 has an upper sash with 6 panes and lower sash with 6 panes) and by the way they open (ie. double-hung has 2 sashes the open independently of each other whereas a casement window swings in or out on hinges).
Today you can buy windows in more forms than our forefathers could have imagined. Double, triple, even quadruple-paned windows filled with inert gasses like argon to prevent heat or cold transfer. They have become an efficient part of the house, yes, but when dealing with a classic home from generations past, an out-of-place window from the wrong time period can destroy a beautiful facade. Windows of yesteryear each had a purpose and served a function. For example, double-hung windows were designed with an upper and lower sash that could be opened independently of each other. The top sash (which on most older homes has been painted shut over the years) was designed so that in the days before air-conditioning, warm air could escape from the house and be replaced by cool air entering from the bottom sash.
So, before you decide to replace your drafty old windows, stop and think. They can be restored to their original appearance, working condition, and efficiency with period weather stripping (copper not foam or rubber.)
We are moving into an 1880 Grand Colonial farm house. Some of the windows are cracked and one has a section broken out of it. The realtor suggests replacing them all with modern upgraded window sets but we are hesitant. What advice can you give us?
Anyone here ever heard of or seen 9 over 1 windows? My 1917 home has them in the dining room and living room. I will be looking for 2 more because, unfortunately, the 2 in the side wall of the living room were replaced with aluminum windows.
I have a client who has requested a 6 over 9 lite window configuration, this would offset the sash dimensions much like a cottage style window . could tell me when and why this configuration was utilized and whether it would consistent with a 1830 straight colonial?
I recently bought an old house (1900-1920) still with all its original windows. I have noticed that some of the windows have small, thin, triangle-shaped metal pieces set into the corners between the pane and the frame. What are these called and why were they needed?
I have always been convinced of the value of older windows. My present home, circa 1915, has many 2872 double hung (with weights) windows. I have restored all of them, BUT the previous owner replaced 12 of them with cheap aluminum products. Does anyone have an idea where I can find used windows (6 panes per window) of the above dimensions?
Revision level: 1.00
Updated: 18 August 2013 Copyright InternationalBusiness Machines Corporation 2012. All rights reserved. USGovernment Users Restricted Rights - Use, duplication, ordisclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract with IBMCorp.
Note: Before using this information and theproduct it supports, read the general information in 5.0 Notices inthis document.
Supported servers: IBM BladeCenter HS22 (1911, 1936, 7809,7870) Follow the instructions in this document in sequentialorder unless these instructions advise you otherwise. Windows andmessages might differ from those in this document. Throughout thisdocument, the term select is used to denote the use of arrow keys,the Tab key, Alt + a letter combination, or the mouse to make aselection.
References to optional hardware in this document do not implysupport of that hardware. For information about supported options,see the ServerProven information for your server at
But I have one issue with some windows terminal servers. The service discovery rule for filesystems does not only find the system drives, but also every userprofile, that is logged on (we are using roaming profiles). If a user is moved to another terminal server in our cluster, the service is vanished. This happens like 20 times a day with different user profiles on different terminal servers.
Near closing time on Saturday afternoon, March 25, 1911, a fire broke out on the top floors of the Asch Building in the Triangle Waist Company. Within minutes, the quiet spring afternoon erupted into madness, a terrifying moment in time, disrupting forever the lives of young workers. By the time the fire was over, 146 of the 500 employees had died. The survivors were left to live and relive those agonizing moments. The victims and their families, the people passing by who witnessed the desperate leaps from ninth floor windows, and the City of New York would never be the same.
Many of the Triangle factory workers were women, some as young as 14 years old. They were, for the most part, recent Italian and European Jewish immigrants who had come to the United States with their families to seek a better life. Instead, they faced lives of grinding poverty and horrifying working conditions. As recent immigrants struggling with a new language and culture, the working poor were ready victims for the factory owners. For these workers, speaking out could end with the loss of desperately needed jobs, a prospect that forced them to endure personal indignities and severe exploitation. Some turned to labor unions to speak for them; many more struggled alone. The Triangle Factory was a non-union shop, although some of its workers had joined the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union.
New York City, with its tenements and loft factories, had witnessed a growing concern for issues of health and safety in the early years of the 20th century. Groups such as the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU) and the Womens' Trade Union League (WTUL) fought for better working conditions and protective legislation. The Triangle Fire tragically illustrated that fire inspections and precautions were woefully inadequate at the time. Workers recounted their helpless efforts to open the ninth floor doors to the Washington Place stairs. They and many others afterwards believed they were deliberately locked-- owners had frequently locked the exit doors in the past, claiming that workers stole materials. For all practical purposes, the ninth floor fire escape in the Asch Building led nowhere, certainly not to safety, and it bent under the weight of the factory workers trying to escape the inferno. Others waited at the windows for the rescue workers only to discover that the firefighters' ladders were several stories too short and the water from the hoses could not reach the top floors. Many chose to jump to their deaths rather than to burn alive.
Toffee hammer used by militant suffragettes taking part in the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) window-smashing campaigns. Such hammers were readily available and could easily be concealed in clothing. In November 1911, window-smashing became an official policy of the WSPU. As Emmeline Pankhurst wrote in 1914, 'The smashing of windows is a time-honoured method of showing displeasure in a political situation'. Attacks on both government and commercial buildings during 1911 and 1912 resulted in the arrest of over 200 women, many of whom received sentences of up to two months in Holloway Gaol. Targets were chosen to avoid any loss of life, but the suffragettes actions often outraged public opinion.
Louis Tiffany coined the word "favrile," and later had it established as a trademark of the Tiffany Studios, to apply to the special glass he created. Tiffany discovered that to create glass, where color is inherent within the glass rather than applied, it was essential to have his own glassworks to control chemical experiments and glass productions. He established a new glassworks factory at Corona, Long Island in 1892. In these furnaces was made a pot-metal glass which was forced into folds and wrinkles while in a molten condition. These folds were adaptable to many forms of drapery. The development of iridescent colors and all the varied hues and shades in Favrile glass called for a great chemical knowledge on the part of Louis Tiffany. To achieve these colors he added cobalt, manganese, gold, and other metal oxides.
Master Artisan Tiffany came to Topeka to see the First Presbyterian Church before drawing any sketches and planned the color scheme for the walls and sky lights to harmonize with the completed windows. He later sent watercolor sketches for approval. During construction, the windows were under his constant supervision.
ff7609af8f