Monday, May 16, 2016

2.2.3. Application Services

Generally as you can share documents on a network, you can regularly additionally share applications. For instance, in the event that you have the best possible kind of programming permit, you can have a shared copy of a few applications put away on the network server. At the point when a workstation needs to run the system, it stacks the documents from the network into its own particular memory, pretty much as it would from a local hard drive, and runs the program normally. Keeping applications concentrated diminishes the amount of hard disk space required on every workstation and makes it simpler to manage the application. (Case in point, with a few applications, you have to update just the network copy; with others, you additionally should perform a short installation for every client.)


Another application service you can have on the network is a shared installation point for programs. Rather than expecting to load a CD-ROM onto every workstation to install an app, you can more often copy the files on CD-ROM to an directory on a server, and after that have the installation program run from that directory for every workstation. This makes introducing the applications much quicker and more suitable.

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