F
Frank Moyer
We are using Project Professional with Project Server. Many project
managers are in remote offices and the connection speed is slow, so we
have setup Terminal Server for them to use. The Terminal Server is on
the same sub-net as Project Server. When users who are using Terminal
Server try to either incorporate actuals into their project plan
(through Track) or go to the Project Center, they receive an immediate
error that says, "An error has occured in the script on this page." Line
1403, Char 3, Error: Unspecified Error, Code: 0, URL:
http://pjc2002-atl/ProjectServer//Transactions/TaskTransactions.asp?SimpleUI=5&NoMenu=1&ProjID=1087.
Do you want to continue running scripts on this page? When you choose
either Yes or No, I see the "Loading Data..." but nothing returns after
an hour.
When I try to open the same project and access Project Center outside of
Terminal Server, I do not get the same error; it works fine. I am
trying to understand what would be different about running this from my
desktop versus from Terminal Server. Any ideas?
Thanks,
Frank
managers are in remote offices and the connection speed is slow, so we
have setup Terminal Server for them to use. The Terminal Server is on
the same sub-net as Project Server. When users who are using Terminal
Server try to either incorporate actuals into their project plan
(through Track) or go to the Project Center, they receive an immediate
error that says, "An error has occured in the script on this page." Line
1403, Char 3, Error: Unspecified Error, Code: 0, URL:
http://pjc2002-atl/ProjectServer//Transactions/TaskTransactions.asp?SimpleUI=5&NoMenu=1&ProjID=1087.
Do you want to continue running scripts on this page? When you choose
either Yes or No, I see the "Loading Data..." but nothing returns after
an hour.
When I try to open the same project and access Project Center outside of
Terminal Server, I do not get the same error; it works fine. I am
trying to understand what would be different about running this from my
desktop versus from Terminal Server. Any ideas?
Thanks,
Frank