Yes, exactly the same model of the tablet. The reason they use Citrix is that they don't allow going from the hospital wi-fi to this urs (or any other URL). That is, they don't want a patient or non-employee to be able to enter a URL and connect to an in-house application. Hence, they do it via Citrix.
>Why is Citrix even in the mix for a web app? Seems like unnecessary overhead and expense.
>
>Are you using the same version of Android and Chrome as the customer? The same model tablet?
>
>
>>Hi,
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>>I have a customer testing my ASP.NET web forms application on a Samsung Galaxy tablet. The application is designed to be responsive; relies heavily on Bootstrap. The app works on my Samsung tablet (in my office). That is, it responds to the size and resolution of the screen.
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>>But the customer connects to the application (they are a big hospital) via Citrix. So he connects to Citrix and then enters the URL in the tablet. What happens is that he sees all pages as if they are on a smart phone (remember Bootstrap is created with 'mobile' device first). So the app never shows as it is supposed to because Samsung tablet is bigger than a smart phone device.
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>>What would you suggest? Should I tell them that the program won't work via Citrix or is there a something I could do or ask them to do?
>>
>>TIA
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