> No, nothing has changed. I'm on 33.6k dial-up believe it or not.
>
> To get it to connect, I go to the tab: Projects and right-click for Update.
> Is this the proper procedure?
>
> FYI - I just tried again, and got the same scheduler did not respond, but then
> I let it sit for the 1 minute timeframe, and then it connected correctly and a
> new job is being worked on. Strange.
Actually, not strange at all!! This happens quite regularly. Probably means the scheduler was busy the first time you called and then was free the second time. Luck of the draw really.
> Also, good question for you. In the Work tab, the Name column has what is
> being worked on. It always has Test02_(number) like this. Does this mean
> that these are Test runs, or are these the actual production searches that are
> supposed to be worked on?
This has been asked quite a few times. Go to the main page for the message boards and click the keyword search link and search for "test work units" and all will be revealed. Most questions that get asked could be self-answered using this technique.
> No, nothing has changed.
)
> No, nothing has changed. I'm on 33.6k dial-up believe it or not.
>
> To get it to connect, I go to the tab: Projects and right-click for Update.
> Is this the proper procedure?
>
> FYI - I just tried again, and got the same scheduler did not respond, but then
> I let it sit for the 1 minute timeframe, and then it connected correctly and a
> new job is being worked on. Strange.
Actually, not strange at all!! This happens quite regularly. Probably means the scheduler was busy the first time you called and then was free the second time. Luck of the draw really.
> Also, good question for you. In the Work tab, the Name column has what is
> being worked on. It always has Test02_(number) like this. Does this mean
> that these are Test runs, or are these the actual production searches that are
> supposed to be worked on?
This has been asked quite a few times. Go to the main page for the message boards and click the keyword search link and search for "test work units" and all will be revealed. Most questions that get asked could be self-answered using this technique.
Cheers,
Gary.