I am trying to access my company desktop at home.
The program runs on 32 bit instead of 64 bit. I was advised
that there is a way to do this on Windows 8. Please help.
thanks in advance.
I am trying to access my company desktop at home.
The program runs on 32 bit instead of 64 bit. I was advised
that there is a way to do this on Windows 8. Please help.
thanks in advance.
I am trying to access my company desktop at home.
The program runs on 32 bit instead of 64 bit. I was advised
that there is a way to do this on Windows 8. Please help.
thanks in advance.
I am unable to sign into my work desktop computer from home. It works fine with my 32bit HP but when I tried the same program on my new 64 bit Lenovo it will not sign on. Is there a way to fool the Citrix program to work with a 64 bit? If so how is this done?
I am sorry for the confusion. I am not well versed on some the lingo. thanks for any information.
I am trying to access my company desktop at home.
The program runs on 32 bit instead of 64 bit. I was advised
that there is a way to do this on Windows 8. Please help.
thanks in advance.
Yes there is a problem. I had a 32 bit HP processor which worked fine. I just replaced the processor with a 64 bit and I am not able to sign into my work desktop remotely.
OK, so you get to the desktop, but can't sign in as user. Right? What do you use to sign in with? Could the change be on your desktop--not the result of your processor change. Can't think of a reason processor change would give the result you are getting. Please clarify--which machine did you change the processor on?
If you can tell us the program's name, we could locate it in the Compatibility Center or see what we can do to fix it.
Otherwise you should look for it yourself.
How it is done you see above but that is technical.
What you can understand from there is that system32 folder in Win x64 contains 64bit files and syswow64 contains 32bit files.
So any older 32bit programs will have to add their system dll's and files to syswow64 in order for the program to work.
For example some installers (like Systran 6) fail to unserstand this and the program would not run properly.
For cases where we deal with 16bit (or DOS) applications on 64bit Windows, you'll have to use a VM with an OS up to XP (that supports 16bit) or DosBox (DOS emulator: runs 16bit apps).