Product-related news and information about server virtualization and the Virtual Iron platform - from Chris Barclay, Director of Product Management at Virtual Iron Software.
Chris Barclay
VDI - From terminal services to virtual desktops

A lot of fingers have been typing about VDI (that's virtual desktop infrastructure) recently. If you're wondering what the fuss is about, the short answer is more than 50 million PCs were shipped last year, which makes it an interesting market for vendors and for organizations that are trying to manage these resources better. Some big players have made noise, such as Citrix (which already has a solution called Presentation Server, err, XenApp), Microsoft (ditto with Terminal Services) and VMware.

The basic concept of VDI is that there are a number of benefits in server virtualization that organizations would like in their desktop infrastructure. To name a few: simpler recovery from hardware failures, centralized management, security... So are there any organizations that are deploying VDI broadly?

In our experience, many organizations are placing desktop infrastructure in the data center for at least a subset of their total environment. We see a lot of Microsoft Terminal Services and Citrix XenApp in our customer base. We're also seeing early evidence of VDI deployments. For smaller user environments, VDI can be as simple as deploying Windows Vista in a virtual machine and connecting using a thin client. We see this a lot in dev/test environments and smaller organizations.

As the environment scales, it's important to think about managability. Brokers can help organizations deploy and manage their virtual desktop infrastructure. I just read a blog over the weekend that describes how to deploy Virtual Iron and Provision Networks to create VDI. And there are other brokers that support Virtual Iron as well, such as 2X Software.

While you can't take your virtual desktop on the plane with you -- at least not yet -- think about VDI the next time your laptop or desktop experiences an issue. You can restore a backup to a virtual machine and be immediately productive. You may find that you don't want to go back.

del.icio.us | digg | StumbleUpon | reddit | Slashdot
Posted by Chris B. on June 3, 2008 5:19 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

← Virtualization Management Study | Virtual Iron Virtualization Manager vs. Citrix XenCenter →

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blog.virtualiron.com/mt/mt-tb.cgi/1671

Post a comment
(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)



RSS/XML Feed Add to Bloglines Add to My Yahoo! Add to Google
ESXi: Free at Last?
Virtual Infrastructure Backup
Virtual Iron Virtualization Manager vs. Citrix XenCenter
VDI - From terminal services to virtual desktops
Virtualization Management Study
Intel and Virtual Iron vConsolidate Webcast Recording Now Available
New Virtual Appliance: PmWiki from JumpBox
Storage Networks Meet Virtual Ones
Virtual Iron, Ready to Take on All Comers?
Server Consolidation: More Than Virtual
ARCHIVES
Virtual Discourse -
Tony Asaro
Customer Spotlight -
Tim Walsh
ZDNet's Virtually Speaking
Alessandro Perilli's Virtualization.info
Tarry Singh's Virtualization for Everyone
David Marshall's VMblog
Mark Bowker -Liquefying IT
Fraser Campbell's Linux Virtualization
Chris Wolf's Virtualization Tips and Ramblings
Scott Lowe's Blog
Virtualization Daily
Thomas Bittman
Gartner