Session Recording

Session Recording 1912 LTSR

Cumulative Update 10 (CU10) is the latest release of the Session Recording 1912 LTSR. CU10 contains 2 fixed issues.

Session Recording 1912 LTSR Cumulative Update 9 (CU9)

Session Recording 1912 LTSR Cumulative Update 8 (CU8)

Session Recording 1912 LTSR Cumulative Update 7 (CU7)

Session Recording 1912 LTSR Cumulative Update 6 (CU6)

Session Recording 1912 LTSR Cumulative Update 5 (CU5)

Session Recording 1912 LTSR Cumulative Update 4 (CU4)

Session Recording 1912 LTSR Cumulative Update 3 (CU3)

Session Recording 1912 LTSR Cumulative Update 2 (CU2)

Session Recording 1912 LTSR Cumulative Update 1 (CU1)

Session Recording 1912 LTSR (initial release)

Session Recording allows you to record the on-screen activities of any user session hosted on a VDA for multi-session OS or single-session OS, over any type of connection, subject to corporate policies and regulatory compliance. Session Recording records, catalogs, and archives sessions for retrieval and playback.

Session Recording provides flexible policies to trigger recordings of application and desktop sessions automatically. Session Recording also supports dynamic session recording. Session Recording enables IT personnel to monitor and examine user activity of application and desktop sessions, and therefore supports internal controls for regulatory compliance and security monitoring. Similarly, Session Recording also aids in technical support by speeding problem identification and time-to-resolution.

Benefits

Enhanced security through logging and monitoring. Session Recording allows organizations to record on-screen user activity for applications that deal with sensitive information, monitoring and preventing the leakage of sensitive information from virtual sessions. Prevention of sensitive information leakage is especially critical in regulated industries such as healthcare and finance.

Powerful activity monitoring. Session Recording captures and archives screen updates, including mouse activity and visible output of keystrokes to provide a record of activity for specific users, applications, and servers.

Session Recording isn’t designed for the evidence collection for legal proceedings. However, organizations can use Session Recording together with other techniques for evidence collection, such as conventional video records combined with traditional text-based eDiscovery tools.

Faster problem resolution. When users call with a problem that is difficult to reproduce, help desk support staff can enable recording of user sessions. If the issue recurs, Session Recording provides a time-stamped visual record of the error, which can then be used for faster troubleshooting.

Session Recording 1912 LTSR