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HOW TO: Connect to Terminal Services with a
Color Resolution of Greater Than 256 Colors in the Windows Server 2003 Family
This article was previously published under Q323353
For a Microsoft Windows 2000 version of this article, see
278502.
SUMMARY
This step-by-step article shows you how to use a color resolution of
greater than 256 colors when you connect to a Windows Server 2003-based
Terminal Services computer.
When you connect to a Windows Server 2003-based computer by using the Windows
Server 2003 Remote Desktop Connection client, you can select the color
resolution at which you want the client session to run. This functionality
permits you to increase the resolution beyond the former limitation of 256
colors. However, by selecting this value, you are not guaranteed to connect at
as high a resolution as you select, because the client setting is only one of
the variables involved in generating a particular color resolution in the
session.
Increase Color Resolution for Windows Server 2003-based
Terminal Services
When you connect to a Windows Server 2003-based computer by using the
Remote Desktop Connection client, you can specify for the client to run with
more than 256 colors. Before you specify a color-resolution setting, you must
first set up Remote Desktop Connections. To do this, follow these steps:
- Right-click My Computer, click Properties,
and then click the Remote tab.
- Click to select the Allow users to connect
remotely to this computer check box, and then click OK.
- On another computer, start Remote Desktop Connections. To do this, click
Start, point to All Programs, point to
Accessories, point to Communications, and
then click Remote Desktop Connection.
- Type the name of the computer that you are connecting to.
- Click Options to expand the connection window.
- Click the Display tab, and then select a color
resolution other than 256 under Colors.
- Click Connect to start the session.
Set Group Policy for Maximum Color Depth of Terminal
Services
In many cases, the client still connects with 256 colors instead of
whatever value you specified in the Remote Desktop Connection
box after you perform the procedure in the "Increase Color Resolution for
Windows Server 2003-based Terminal Services" section of this article. This
behavior may occur because of Group Policy on the Windows Server 2003-based
computer that determines the maximum color depth that can be negotiated by the
client. In Windows Server 2003, the default policy setting is 256 colors, but
this setting can be changed by using the Group Policy Editor.
To use the Group Policy Editor to change the setting, follow these steps:
- Click Start, click Run, and then type
MMC.
- On the File menu, click Add/Remove Snap-in,
click Add, and then click Group
Policy Object Editor.
- Click Add, make sure that Local Computer
is selected in the Group Policy Object box, click
Finish, click Close, and then click OK.
- Click Computer Configuration, click
Administrative Templates, click Windows Components,
and then click Terminal Services.
- Click Limit maximum color depth, and
then select the color depth that you want.
After you change the setting, you should be able to specify any setting of
more than the default setting of 256 colors setting, and the client should be
able to connect with that resolution.
NOTE: You cannot specify and connect at a higher resolution
than your hardware can support. Therefore, if you have a video card in your
computer that supports only up to 256 colors, you cannot connect to a session
with a higher resolution than that.
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