Adio, Ndustrial, Otspot – ProSoft Technology RLX2-IHNF-WC User Manual
Page 22: Rowser, Onfiguration, System requirements, Installation from dvd
RLX2 Industrial Hotspot Series
Page 22 of 212
ProSoft Technology, Inc.
June 15, 2015
The RadioLinx Industrial Hotspot Browser
Configuration Tool
The Industrial Hotspot Browser configuration tool (hereafter called the IH Browser) is
used for setup and configuration of the RLX2 radios. It is designed for personal
computers running Microsoft Windows operating systems. The IH Browser can be
installed from the product DVD shipped with the RLX2 radio product, or it can be
downloaded from the ProSoft website.
System Requirements
The RLX2-IHx browser is designed for Microsoft Windows XP, 2000, and 2003. Minimum
hardware requirements are:
Pentium
®
II 450 MHz minimum. Pentium III 733 MHz (or better) recommended
Supported operating systems:
o
Microsoft Windows XP Professional 32-bit with Service Pack 3
o
Microsoft Windows 7 Professional 32- or 64-bit, with Service Pack 1
o
Microsoft Windows 8 Release Preview 32- or 64-bit.
Other Microsoft Windows operating system versions may work but have not
been tested by ProSoft and are not officially supported.
128 Mbytes of RAM minimum, 256 Mbytes or more of RAM recommended
100 MB available hard drive space
256-color VGA graphics adapter, 800 x 600 minimum resolution (True Color 1024 x
768 resolution or better recommended)
At least one 100BASET or 1000BASET network interface. A second interface is often
useful to setup a small private network for initial configuration and testing.
In addition, these items may be needed:
A DVD-ROM drive, if installing the RadioLinx IH Browser from optical media.
An RS-232 port on the PC or a USB-to-serial convertor cable, to use serial
encapsulation features or to access system debugging information.
An internet connection may be useful to download updated product information
from the ProSoft Technology website at http://www.ProSoft-Technology.com.
Installation from DVD
1. Insert the ProSoft Solutions DVD in the DVD drive. On most computers, a menu
screen will open automatically. If a menu does not appear within a few seconds,
follow these steps: