mittim12's Accepted Solutions

Power off should do the trick.
I feel like this is something that has to be determined on a case by case basis.    We started out with 1 vCPU which works great for 95% of our users.    We have others that require more resource... See more...
I feel like this is something that has to be determined on a case by case basis.    We started out with 1 vCPU which works great for 95% of our users.    We have others that require more resources so they have been moved into a different pool with additional resources.    Also, we have found that 1 vCPU works well for most everything except video.   If you are going to play a lot of video you may want to test with 2 vCPU and see if that performs better.  In the end it's all about what your user feedback and needs dictate.   You don't want to squeeze your users of resources because that will lead to poor performance and bad perception but also be careful not to overcommit because they will also lead to poor performance and a bad perception.    Once people get a negative perception of the environment it's difficult to get over.
It should not impact the already connected users but the web page will be down and unable to service any new connections until the machine has started back up.
It does automatically add them to the persistent disk except in cases where the profile is already created on the golden image.   Make sure your user profile isn't on the template and see if it w... See more...
It does automatically add them to the persistent disk except in cases where the profile is already created on the golden image.   Make sure your user profile isn't on the template and see if it will store everything on the persistent disk. 
I think you see that when you have the View Storage Accelerator enabled on the pool.   That is where things are cached in memory of the vSphere boxes to improve performance and the default for re... See more...
I think you see that when you have the View Storage Accelerator enabled on the pool.   That is where things are cached in memory of the vSphere boxes to improve performance and the default for regenerating the cache is 7 days.  
The link in your thread was about VDM 2.0 which was VMware's first iteration into the VDI market.    The latest is VMware Horizon View which can be found here, VMware Horizon View (formerly VMwar... See more...
The link in your thread was about VDM 2.0 which was VMware's first iteration into the VDI market.    The latest is VMware Horizon View which can be found here, VMware Horizon View (formerly VMware View) (VDI), Virtual Desktop Manager | United States.     There is a lot of information on that page that you can review and if you have any questions please feel free to post them in this forum.  
I typically just place a host in maintenance mode to move the replica off.   Would that work?
1:  Are you upgrading just composer on the vCenter boxes or doing some type of vCenter upgrade too? 2:  There is no way that I know of.   The best practice is to stop all of the View services f... See more...
1:  Are you upgrading just composer on the vCenter boxes or doing some type of vCenter upgrade too? 2:  There is no way that I know of.   The best practice is to stop all of the View services for each View CB in a replica group when upgrading.  
When connecting via the View client there is a display option that will allow you to set multi monitor mode.
Current sessions shouldn't be impacted nor should new sessions provided you have available machines online
You would need to create a second connection broker and then tag it and the desktop pool with the same tag.    The next step would be routing the classroom to that particular broker.  
Are you using a disposable disk?    When using a disposable disk the page file is moved over to that disk so that may explain the difference in free space. 
At a high level you would install the agent, shutdown the machine, create a snapshot, and then create your pool based on that snapshot.
PCOIP does not do drive remapping like RDP did.   A valid workaround could be to use a USB storage device on the connecting machine and make use of the USB redirection feature of View.
The new version of Horizon View allows you to set vlans at a pool level now.  This new feature may simplify your task even more and reduce the need for a script. You can review this link for a wr... See more...
The new version of Horizon View allows you to set vlans at a pool level now.  This new feature may simplify your task even more and reduce the need for a script. You can review this link for a write up on the feature,http://myvirtualcloud.net/?p=4730
The best place to submit new ideas for a product is the feature request page, http://www.vmware.com/support/policies/feature.html. 
As long as you don't move the service you shouldn't need to reinstall or change anything within View as the View configuration points to the service.     The 18443 is how View connects to the ser... See more...
As long as you don't move the service you shouldn't need to reinstall or change anything within View as the View configuration points to the service.     The 18443 is how View connects to the service not the database so you shouldn't have to change that either.  
Are you using a KMS server to activate office or attempting to use a MAK key?    It is considered best practice when dealing with View to utilize a KMS server
Ok, my next step would be to bring up the parent image, remove the View agent,  reboot,  reinstall the View agent, and then provision a new machine based on that image.   
I think the decision lies in what you are more comfortable with and what you may already have setup.   The users who are upgrading from previous versions that already have events databases config... See more...
I think the decision lies in what you are more comfortable with and what you may already have setup.   The users who are upgrading from previous versions that already have events databases configured may stay with that where as someone who is new and has existing syslog infrastructure may opt for that method.