Raritan LARA ECO User Manual Page 67

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CHAPTER 6. MENU OPTIONS 57
Specifies which Remote Console Viewer to use.
Default Java Virtual Machine (JVM)
Uses the default JVM of your web browser. This may be the Microsoft JVM for the
Internet Explorer or the Sun JVM if it is configured this way. Use of the Sun JVM may
also be forced (see below).
Sun Microsystems Java Browser Plugin
Instructs the web browser of your administration system to use the JVM of Sun
Microsystems. The JVM in the browser is used to run the code for the Remote Console
window which is actually a Java Applet. If you check this box for the first time on your
administration system and the appropriate Java plug-in is not yet installed on your
system, it may be downloaded and installed automatically.
However, in order to make the installation possible, you still have to answer the
according dialogs with “yes”. The download volume is around 11 Mbytes. The
advantage of downloading Sun’s JVM is the usage of a stable and identical JVM across
different platforms. The Remote Console software is optimized for this JVM version
and offers a wider range of functionality when run in SUN’s JVM.
(Hint: If you are connected over a slow connection to the Internet you can also pre-
install the JVM on your administration machine. )
ActiveX control
This option instructs the web browser to use the ActiveX-Control of the KVM Vision
Viewer, an application available separately. You have to install this program on your
local system. Please refer to the manual of the KVM Vision Viewer for further
information. This option only works with Microsoft Internet Explorer on Win32
Systems.
Note: You may use the KVM Vision Viewer as delivered on the CD ROM enclosed with
the LARA eco or download the latest KVM Vision Viewer release from Raritan’s
website at http://www.raritan.com/support/embeddedtools/
in section “Support” under
“Tools for Embedded Products”.
Mouse Hotkey
Allows to specify a hotkey combination which starts either the mouse synchronization
process if pressed in the Remote Console or is used to leave the single mouse mode.
Remote Console Button Keys
Button Keys allow simulating keystrokes on the remote system that cannot be generated
locally. The reason for this might be a missing key or just the fact that the local operating
system of the Remote Console is unconditionally catching this keystroke already. Typical
examples are “Control+Alt+Delete” on Windows and DOS, that is always caught, or the
key sequence “Control+Backspace” on Linux that can be used for terminating the X-Server.
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