Yes, assuming you have the MULT and BATCH features active, then
you can launch as many eValid playbacks at the same time as your
machine will allow.
You can have a single batch file (you may want to use the START
command in the batch file to launch operations independently), or you
can run the eValid commands serially.
Or, you can have separate batch files, too.
The scheduler in Windows is a very good way to control periodic
launching of batch commands (which then launch eValid playbacks).
In "monitoring mode" we generally recommend use of the scheduler.
http://www.e-Valid.com/Products/Documentation.9/Monitoring/nt.scheduler.htmlHere are some additional items to consider...
Here are basic user recommendations that should be followed to
assure the maximum benefit from eValid when used in monitoring mode:
http://www.e-Valid.com/Products/Documentation.9/Monitoring/recommendations.htmlIf you are trying to run a large number of eValid playbacks, you need
to be aware of the possibility of inducing a cascading failure:
http://www.e-Valid.com/Products/Documentation.9/Monitoring/cascading.failure.htmlLastly, eValid V9 has the ability to trap nearly every kind of
operational exception:
http://www.e-Valid.com/Products/Documentation.9/Reporting/issues.html