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Sounds like an excellent use-case for a Citrix-hosted SAP client. All you would have to install on your Mac desktop is Citrix Receiver. 

Joe

-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Leikert [mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2011 2:31 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [MSUNAG] SAP GUI on Macs

Hi All,

Ok, normally I keep quiet about this kinda stuff.  But I digress...

Yes, I inquired about the SAP GUI for Java since our department has pretty much standardized on OSX, but it's not a 'feasible business approach', as referenced below.  Cheap, good, fast- anyone?  Interesting how they are targeting 'ongoing activities' to support running the GUI for Windows _ON_ OSX when they could just pool their resources and support the Java GUI to begin with.  $140 end user Microsoft tax- *approved*.

Ok, rant off.  Sorry, feisty today... after spending the entire morning wrestling with this.  Imagine when a non-technical staff member does
*everything* in OSX and has to transpose little bits and pieces back and forth between their native OS and and one application running in a VM.

Jim

High Performance Computing Center - Institute for Cyber-Enabled Research Michigan State University


/* begin snip - names removed to protect the innocent */

While I can certainly understand your predicament with SAP access on Macs and other OS, enabling SAP GUI for Java client is not a feasible business approach, for several reasons:

1.       Portal would need to be reconfigured to accept SAP GUI for Java

2.       New Access/Security roles would need to be created and issued 
to those using SAP GUI for Java (or we would need to redeploy the GUI to all users [switch them from current SAP GUI for Windows])

3.       EBS infrastructure would need to be verified/changed to use the 
SAP GUI for Java (changes to development, applications, etc.)

4.       Changes would be required to online and hard copy user 
documentation of the system (screens look and sometimes behave differently between the SAP GUI clients)

With these changes there would need to be full regression tests of the SAP links and workflow processes to make sure all functionality works under the new configuration.  This change would likely require a new project be invoked (with the major cost and time implications that come with it).

There are ongoing activities by the portal/infrastructure teams to continually search for patches, updates, even different browsers, that could be applied or used by Mac and Linux users under the current SAP GUI client for Windows that more fully support the current environment/configuration.  I will also pass your name on to these areas if there is something that you could help beta test before it is deployed to the University as a whole.

Until then, you are limited to what features/functions you can access and use, unless you are a Mac user and proceed with adding a Virtual Windows environment (which runs around $140).

/* end snip */


Michael Hoxsey wrote:
> It won't work, the EBS Portal was built to only interface with the 
> SAPGUI for Windows, not the SAPGUI for Java.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Michael Kramizeh [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
> Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2011 1:01 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: [MSUNAG] SAP GUI on Macs
> 
> Has anyone had any experience with using the SAP GUI on a mac with EBS?