Administrator Guide

Table Of Contents
However, it can work after you configure the Bind Touch and Monitor settings either using Admin Policy Tool or Wyse
Management Suite.
Configuring the external touch screen settings for VDI sessions
When you connect a touch monitor to the ThinOS client using a USB port, you must configure the settings in the Global
Connection Settings window.
Citrix sessionTo use a touch monitor in a Citrix session, do the following:
1. On the ThinOS client, from the desktop menu, click Connect Manager.
2. Click Global Connection Settings.
3. Clear the USB devices redirection check box and click OK.
4. Start the Citrix session.
Other VDI sessionsYou do not have to modify the USB devices redirection setting. Connect the touch monitor to the
ThinOS client and start the VDI session.
NOTE: The right-click touch functionality does not work in all VDI sessions due to the limitation on VDI protocols.
Configuring the peripherals settings
Use the Peripherals dialog box to configure the settings for the keyboard, mouse, audio, serial, camera, and Bluetooth.
Configure the keyboard settings
About this task
This section describes how to configure the keyboard settings on your thin client.
Steps
1. From the desktop menu, click System Setup > Peripherals.
The Peripherals dialog box is displayed.
2. Click the Keyboard tab, and do the following:
a. From the Keyboard Layout drop-down list, select a keyboard layout. The default layout is set to English (United
States).
NOTE:
Support for Macedonian, Macedonian Standard, Belgian, and Belgian (Comma) keyboard layouts are added
in ThinOS 9.1.2101 release. You can also use the Admin Policy Tool or the Wyse Management Suite policy settings
to configure the keyboard layout. To configure the settings using Admin Policy Tool or Wyse Management Suite, on
the Advanced Tab, go to Peripherals Managements > Keyboard and select the preferred Keyboard Layout. Blast
session does not support Macedonian, Macedonian Standard, Belgian, and Belgian (Comma) keyboard layouts.
b. From the Delay before Repeat drop-down list, select the time for Repeat Delay. The time specifies the pause between
pressing the key on the keyboard and when the key starts repeating itself.
c. Click any of the following options to set the Repeat Rate:
Slow
Normal
Fast
Repeat Rate specifies the speed at which the key repeats itself after you press and hold down a key on the keyboard.
d. Click any of the following options to set the Numlock status:
None
On
Off
Numlock specifies whether the Numlock key on the keyboard must be turned on or turned off when you boot the
terminal.
e. In the Disabled keys field, enter the keys on the keyboard that must be disabled. Use a comma to separate multiple
entries.
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Configuring the thin client local settings