At the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, we too have had success with TMS on Macs. One setup from outside the building involves secure remote access, then connection to TMS from an Intel Mac using Parallels 3.0 and Windows XP. The only slowdown here is the secure remote one; a Mac inside the MFA would access TMS without delays.
Best,
Peter
Peter Der Manuelian
Giza Archives Project Director
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
www.mfa.org/giza
-----Original Message-----
From: The Museum System (TMS) Users on behalf of Suzanne Quigley
Sent: Fri 1/4/2008 11:59 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Cc:
Subject: Re: Mac Access and TMS
TMS works fine (and fast) on the new Macs that have windows on what I
like to think of as "the backside". But you need windows based
software on the back side to make life easier - in other words - its
really useful to have photoshop, word and excel on both 'sides'.
I've seen citrix used. I've also used ezvue to log in - it can be
slow. - best go for the newer Macs.
++++++++++++
Suzanne Quigley
art & artifact services
www.suzannequigley.com
718 875 1697
917 676 9039 (cell)
[log in to unmask]
On Jan 4, 2008, at 11:50 AM, Rob Morgan wrote:
> Hello Everyone,
>
> We would like our graphics department to have access to TMS. They
> use Macs, so we tried using Virtual PC, but it is painfully slow.
> Currently our Macs are a G4 and a G5. I’ve heard that the new Macs
> have an Intel chip that makes it much easier to access PC/Microsoft
> programs, i.e., TMS. Has anyone had any success with these new
> Macs? Or, does anybody have a better solution than Virtual PC for
> the older Macs, i.e., the G4 and G5?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Rob Morgan
>
> Baltimore Museum of Art
>
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