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TODAY'S TOP SOA & WEBSERVICES LINKS Solutions Is the Corporate Desktop the Next Frontier for Virtualization?
Solving real desktop problems is exciting and compelling for corporate enterprises
By: Alex Vasilevsky
Sep. 17, 2008 03:15 PM
Virtualization is perhaps the sexiest word in the IT industry today. The benefits of virtualizing servers are widely recognized, and the market for server virtualization software is growing rapidly. This growth rate has caught the attention of many competitors from small startups to giants like Microsoft. At the last count, there were 43 companies directly involved in platform virtualization (Virtualization Industry Radar).
While server virtualization appears to have gone mainstream, the case for desktop virtualization is often less clear. However, the potential opportunity is significant with the number of client devices far exceeding the number of servers (PC shipments are projected to be 311 million units worldwide[1] versus 8 million units for x86-based servers). Primary reasons why organizations will embrace desktop virtualization include:
Two well-known types of desktop virtualization solutions exist today:
One solution is a desktop virtualization approach where desktops and applications are encapsulated as a virtual environment and delivered dynamically, independent of each other, to be run locally, directly on bare-metal PC hardware, providing enhanced security and centralized management while preserving the flexibility of local PC capabilities. Unlike existing solutions, which primarily focus on task-oriented workers, this solution is capable of supporting a wide range of scenarios, including:
In this system, typically the PC system administrators are responsible for the creation and maintenance of the corporate desktop environments. These virtual desktop environments usually include the operating system, various applications and end-user specific data. They are packaged and encapsulated as virtual machines and distributed in a standard, portable format that describes the virtual machine, virtual hardware, virtual disks, and the rest of the user execution environment. These virtual desktops can be pre-generated or built dynamically on-demand. The system management virtual environments are typically created and distributed by PC software management vendors to provide important management functions, such as PC monitoring, backup, anti-virus detection, root-kit detection and many others. The model of directly executing multiple virtual environments on the same physical PC in full isolation from each other enables many important PC management functions, including but not limited to:
These capabilities are provided for all desktop operating environments running on PC architecture, while remaining protected from each other and their security vulnerabilities. This model of desktop virtualization is suitable for devices that are always connected to the network, such as stationary desktop PCs connected via a persistent network connection, and mobile notebooks that can be occasionally disconnected from the corporate networks. Desktop virtualization technology is useful to organizations with multiple remote locations or branch offices or single remote workers logging in from the road, where consolidating the management of these desktops back to a single location is more efficient from a labor and cost perspective. Imagine the ability to securely isolate the users' personal environments from the corporate networks, while letting them have complete freedom with their PCs when they're gone from the office without changing or modifying their corporate Windows environments. The future of desktop virtualization has yet to be determined - yet the basic idea of using virtualization technology to solve real desktop problems is very exciting and compelling for corporate enterprises. Moreover, while desktop virtualization is not the end-all cure to desktop issues - it is a great beginning. Reference 1. IDC: PC Market Continues To Resist Economic Pressures With A Boost From Low Cost Portable PCs, Sept 10, 2008. SUBSCRIBE TO THE WORLD'S MOST POWERFUL NEWSLETTERS SUBSCRIBE TO OUR RSS FEEDS & GET YOUR SYS-CON NEWS LIVE!
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