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Industrial ThinClient Nodes - 1401 OpenCLIENT™ OpenCLIENT Terminals & Nodes are industrially hardened platforms used for terminal server network applications. OpenCLIENT terminals are designed to support ACP's ThinManager server software. Several OpenCLIENT models are available based on your screen size and resolution requirements. Features - Enabled by ACP ThinManager™ (ThinManager sold separately)
- 8.4” & 10.4” color flat panel display terminals or non-integrated display nodes
Reprogrammable keypad or analog resistive touchscreen - Built-in PCI 10/100 BaseT Ethernet
- PC/104 expansion up to two standard cards (only one on 1300 models)
- NS Geode GX1 300 MHz processors
- 128 MB DRAM
- Parallel, RS-232 and RS-485, PS/2 mouse and keyboard, and VGA ports
- NEMA 4/4X/12 front panel (units with integrated displays)
UL listed for hazardous locations: Class I, Division 2, Groups A, B, C, D (1401, 1300HAZ - not 1300 non-HAZ models, 33XX); Class II Divison 2, Groups F and G (33XX)
Models - 1401 OpenCLIENT for Heavy Duty Industrial applications
- 1300 OpenCLIENT for Light Duty Industrial applications (replaced by the 1401 Open CLIENT)
|   | | Each OpenCLIENT™ runs what looks like a full Windows operating system. The server runs a standard version of a Microsoft® operating system designed for thin clients (Windows® NT Server, Windows® 2000 Server, or Windows® 2003 Server) that allows users to log in and establish a full Windows® session running on the server. Multiple users can repeat this process concurrently many times. Each user gets a dedicated share of memory and access to the server's applications. When an OpenCLIENT™ terminal is powered up it logs on to the server just as a terminal would log on to a mainframe. In addition to giving the client access to its resources, the server also creates a virtual display, which is transferred to the OpenCLIENT™ terminal via an Ethernet link. The OpenCLIENT™ also takes input from the user (via the keypad, keyboard, mouse, or touchscreen) and sends it back to the server over the same link. This allows a user to control the Windows® session as if it were running locally. While it appears that the control screens are running locally, they are actually running on the server in the climate controlled IT department. The client's session is configured just like any Windows session - the operator can either see a standard Windows screen (with the Internet Explorer icon, the Recycle Bin, the Start Menu, etc.) or a "locked down" version with limited functionality. For dedicated lines running an HMI or SCADA package, the session is usually set to start up with the HMI display exclusively. |
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