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Equal per User: Each User logged into the machine will have it's processes rationed out according to the usage on the machine, so even if you had the same user logged on with multiple sessions (i.e., remote streaming apps, Desktop session(s), etc.) they *all* count towards that users total usage.

Equal per Session: Each Session will have it's processes rationed out according to the usage on the machine, so even if you had the same user logged on with multiple sessions (i.e., remote streaming apps, Desktop session(s), etc.) they *each* are their own regulated resource, and would balance across each session regardless of how many users are logged on and whether a user has multiple sessions or not.

So, bottom line:

If you have a 1 user to 1 session ratio, either profile should give you the same results = each user is equal to every other user on the machine.

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11y ago
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Q: What is the difference between the equal per user profile and the equal per session profile?
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