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virtual desktop

Citrix Integrates Access Gateway 1.8 With XenDesktop

June 10, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Citrix has integrated its Access Gateway appliance, version 1.8 with its recently released XenDesktop virtual desktop solution. Citrix’ security solution will allow companies to deliver virtual desktops to users based on identity, location and security status.

Citrix said its SmartAccess technology, when applied to its VDI solution, will allow customers to deploy virtual desktops more quickly and more securely to users worldwide. Additionally, the gateway’s wizards have been extended to support XenDesktop. The configuration wizards now enable IS managers to automate common XenDesktop configuration tasks.

The 8.1 release of Citrix Access Gateway costs about $3500 and includes end user licenses for XenDesktop use.

[Source: ZDnet Blogs]

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Access Gateway, Access Gateway 1.8, citrix, Citrix Access Gateway, Citrix Access Gateway 1.8, Citrix XenDesktop, desktop virtualization, SmartAccess, virtual desktop, virtualisation, virtualization, XenDesktop

Citrix Unveils XenDesktop 2.0

May 20, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

“It’s like getting a fresh new PC every day.” That’s how Citrix is touting its long awaited VDI solution, dubbed XenDesktop version 2.0, probably just because it’s what all the cool kids name their solutions nowadays.

Citrix

XenDesktop 2.0 was unveiled at Citrix Synergy 2008, with the company also revealing some previously unannounced details about the complete XenDesktop product line, including the release of a new Express Edition offering free desktop virtualization for up to 10 users, and new Enterprise and Platinum Editions which integrate application virtualization via the new XenApp for Virtual Desktops feature.

These are the five editions in detail for the XenDesktop product line:

  • Express Edition – free desktop virtualization for up to 10 users.
  • Standard Edition – offers a cost-effective, but high performance, entry-level desktop virtualization solution suitable for departmental implementations.
  • Advanced Edition – an enterprise desktop virtualization solution for organizations that have an existing application delivery already it place. Advanced Edition adds powerful virtual desktop provisioning capabilities that reduce storage costs and simplify desktop lifecycle management by enabling a single desktop image to dynamically create and update hundreds of virtual desktops on demand.
  • Enterprise Edition – comprehensive desktop delivery solution including integrated application delivery. Enterprise Edition adds fully integrated application delivery with XenApp for Virtual Desktops, based on the most proven application virtualization technology in the industry with over 100 million users and 99 percent of the Fortune 500 as customers.
  • Platinum Edition – ideal for customers looking to implement desktops as a service from the datacenter. Platinum Edition adds extensive optimization, security, monitoring and end user support benefits to create the ultimate desktop experience and best overall product value. This edition also includes the award-winning Citrix EasyCall™ technology, giving users instant click-to-call capability from any application, as well as a built in on-demand remote assistance feature that allows support staff to see exactly what end users see if a problem occurs, chat with them in real time, and even take permission-based control of the end-user’s mouse and keyboard to walk them through a problem resolution live.

XenDesktop is available now and can be downloaded today. Suggested retail pricing is per concurrent user as follows:

  • XenDesktop Express – free download
  • XenDesktop Standard – USD $75
  • XenDesktop Advanced – USD $195
  • XenDesktop Enterprise – USD $295
  • XenDesktop Platinum – USD $395

Citrix also unveiled a new Desktop Appliance Partner Program aimed at establishing trusted standards for desktop appliances, a new class of device that is purpose-built to deliver a superior user experience for virtual desktop delivery.

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: citrix, Citrix Synergy, Citrix Synergy 2008, Citrix XenDesktop, Citrix XenDesktop 2.0, dekstop virtualization, VDI, virtual desktop, virtualisation, virtualization, Xen, XenDesktop 2.0, xensource

Ericom Extends PowerTerm WebConnect To Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V

May 20, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Ericom Software today announced that PowerTerm WebConnect, Ericom’s presentation virtualization and desktop virtualization (VDI) solution, now provides centrally managed access to virtual desktops running on Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V.

Ericom

PowerTerm WebConnect provides access to Windows Terminal Services, including Windows Server 2008, Virtual Desktops, Blade PCs and legacy hosts. Ericom’s solution centralizes the management and delivery of virtual desktops and server-based applications.

Ericom Founder and CEO, Eran Heyman commented:

“Ericom’s presentation virtualization and desktop virtualization solution is ideal for enterprises seeking to reduce the cost and complexity of traditional desktop management. Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V coupled with Ericom’s PowerTerm WebConnect provides organizations with a sophisticated and centrally managed desktop virtualization platform that simplifies and accelerates deployments of virtual desktops across the enterprise.”

For more information on Ericom’s Desktop Virtualization solution, visit www.ericom.com/VDI.

[Source: The Earth Times]

Filed Under: News Tagged With: desktop virtualization, Ericom, Ericom PowerTerm WebConnect, Ericom Software, Hyper-V, microsoft, Microsoft Windows Server 2008, Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V, PowerTerm WebConnect, VDI, virtual desktop, virtualisation, virtualization, Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V

Ericom Releases PowerTerm WebConnect, VDI Solution Based On Oracle VM

May 5, 2008 by Robin Wauters 2 Comments

Ericom Software today announced the availability of Ericom PowerTerm WebConnect for Oracle VM, a desktop virtualization (VDI) solution based on Oracle’s server virtualization software.

Ericom

Ericom explains its decision to use Oracle VM like this:

“Oracle VM is scalable, low-cost server virtualization software that supports both Oracle and non-Oracle applications. Oracle VM extends Oracle’s support for grid computing by providing the ability to virtualize within as well as across servers.”

“Customers continue to seek better solutions to address shrinking IT budgets and expanding data center costs,” said Monica Kumar, senior director Linux and Open Source Product Marketing, Oracle. “With Ericom’s PowerTerm WebConnect for Oracle VM, customers gain the benefits of both desktop and server virtualization, which can help dramatically enhance IT resource utilization.”

For more information and to download Ericom PowerTerm WebConnect for Oracle VM, you can click here.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: desktop virtualization, Ericom, Ericom PowerTerm WebConnect, Ericom Software, oracle, Oracle VM, PowerTerm WebConnect, VDI, virtual desktop, virtualisation, virtualization

Looking Back At A Decade of Open Source Virtualization

March 10, 2008 by Kris Buytaert 3 Comments

Will 2008 become the “Virtual Year”?

That’s what some people would have us believe now that the virtualization hype is reaching never before seen heights, and large acquisitions & mergers are starting to become quite common (Citrix bought Xensource, Novell picked up PlateSpin, Sun acquired innotek, Quest Software snapped up Vizioncore while VMware treated itself to Thinstall, and so on).

But few people realize or fail to acknowledge that the large majority of virtualization techniques and developments were started as, or remain Open Source projects.

Where are we coming from ?

Even without looking back, we know that IBM was one of the pioneers in the virtualization area; they were talking about Virtual Machines before I was even born. But who remembers one of the first Open Source virtualization takeovers? Back in 1999, Mandrake Software bought Bochs . Yes, that’s nineteen ninety nine, even before the y2k hype. Kevin Lawton had been working on the Bochs project together with different other developers since 1994. In 1999, he also had started working on Plex86, also known as FreeMWare.

Kevin back then compared Plex86 to other tools such as VMWare, Wine, DOSEMU and Win4Lin. Plex86 in the meanwhile has been totally reinvented. While at first it was capable of running almost all operating systems, it is now a very light virtual machine designed only to run Linux.

Wine was also a frequently covered topic at different Linux Kongress venues. As its initiators claim themselves, Wine is not an emulator, but it most certainly used to be a key player in the virtualization area. Its attempts to run non-native applications in a different operating system, in this case mostly Windows applications on a Linux platform, didn’t exactly pass by unnoticed.

However, installing VMWare or Qemu became such an easier alternative than trying to run an application with Wine. And Win4Lin, its commercial brother, had similar adoption issues. Corporate adoption for neither Wine nor Win4Lin was successful, and Win4Lin recently reinvented itself as a Virtual Desktop Server product, where it is bound to face a lot of stiff competition.

People who claim desktop virtualization was ‘born in 2007’ obviously missed part of history. Although most Unix gurus claim desktop virtualization has been around for several decades via the X11 system, the Open Source alternatives to actually do the same on different platforms (or cross-platform) have also been around for a while.

Who has never heard of VNC, the most famous product that came out the Olivetti & Oracle Research Laboratory (ORL) in Cambridge, England? VNC was one of the first tools people began to use to remotely access Windows machines. System administrators who didn’t feel like running Windows applications on their Unix desktop just hid an old Windows desktop under their desk and connected to it using VNC. It was also quickly adopted by most desktop users as a tool to take over the desktop of a remote colleague. After the Olivetti & Oracle Research Laboratory closed different spin-offs of VNC such as RealVNC , TightVNC and UltraVNC popped up.. and it’s still a pretty actively used tool.

But VNC wasn’t the only contender in the field. Back in 2003, I ran into NX for the very first time , written by the Italian folks from NoMachine , with a FreeNX release co-existing alongside a commercial offering. It was first claimed to be yet another X reinvention, however NX slightly modified the concept and eliminated the annoying X roundtrips. The fact that NX used proxies on each side of the connection guaranteed that it could function even on extremely slow connections.

In the early days of this century, there was some confusion between UML and UMLinux. While Jeff Dike called his User-mode Linux the port of Linux to Linux, it was in essence a full blown Linux kernel running as a process on another Linux machine.

Apart from UML, there was UMLinux, also a User Mode Linux project, featuring a UML linux machine which booted using Lilo and from which an out-of-the-box Linux distribution could be installed. Two projects, one on each side of the Atlantic, with both a really similar goal and similar naming was simply asking for confusion. In 2003, the UMLinux folks decided to rebrand to FAUmachine. hence ending the confusion once and for all.

Research on virtualization wasn’t conducted exclusively in Germany; the Department of Computer Science and Engineering of the University of Washington was working on the lesser known Denali project. The focus of the Denali project is on lightweight protection domains; they are aiming at running 100s and 1000s VM’s concurrently on one single physical host.

And apparently, one project with a confusing name wasn’t enough. The Open Source community seemed desparate for more of that. Hence, the Linux-VServer project and Linux Virtual Server came around around the same time. The Linux Virtual Server actually hasn’t got that much to do with virtualization, at all. In essence, Linux Virtual Server is a load balancer that will balance TCP/IP connections to a bunch of other servers hence acting to the end user as one big High Performant and Highly Available Virtual Server. (The IPVS patch for Linux has been around since early 1999).

Linux VServer (released for the first time in late 2001) on the other hand provides us with different Virtual Private Servers that are running in different security contexts. Linux VServer will create different user space segments , so that each Virtual Private server looks like a real server and can only ‘see’ its own processes.

By then, Plex86 had a big competitor coming from France, where Fabrice Bellard was working Qemu. At first, Qemu was really a Machine Emulator. Much like Bochs (anyone still running AmigaOS?), you could create different virtual machines from totally different architectures. Evidently froml X86, but also from ARM, Sparc, PowerPC, Mips, m68k and even development versions for Alpha and alternative 64bit architectures. Qemu however was perceived by a lot of people as slow compared to other alternatives. There was an Accelerator module available providing an enormous performance boost, however that didn’t have such an open license as the rest of Qemu, which held back its adoption significantly. It was only about a year ago (early 2007) that the Accelerator module also became completely open source.

The importance of Qemu however should not be underestimated, as most of the current hot virtualization projects are borrowing Qemu knowledge or technology left and right. KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is the most prominent user of Qemu, but even VirtualBox, Xen (in HVM mode) and the earlier mentioned Win4Lin are using parts of Qemu.

As this is an overview of the recent Open Source Virtualisation history the focus has been on running virtual machines on Linux, or connecting to a remote platform from a Linux or Unix desktop, where most of the early developments have taken place. We shouldn’t fail to mention CoLinux in this regard, however. CoLinux allows you to run Linux as a Windows process, giving people on locked down desktops an alternative for VMWare to run Linux on their desktop.

Xen is with no doubt the most famous open source virtualization solution around, certainly after its acquisition by Citrix. Xen was conceived at the XenoServer project from the University of Cambridge, an initiative aiming to build an infrastructure for distributed computing and to create a place where one can safely execute potentially dangerous code in a distributed environment. Xen was first described in a paper presented at SOSP in 2003 but work on it began somewhere in 2001.

Next week, we’ll talk more about virtualization and open source with a detailed look at today’s landscape.

Filed Under: Featured, Guest Posts Tagged With: 64bit, Accelerator, acquisitions, Alpha, ARM, bochs, citrix, CoLinux, denali, DOSEMU, faumachine, FreeMWare, freenx, IBM, Jeff Dike, Kevin Lawton, kvm, linux, linux kernel, Linux Kongress, Linux Virtual Server, Linux-VServer, m68k, Mandrake, Mips, nomachine, nx, Olivetti & Oracle Research Laboratory, open source, ORL, OS, Plex86, PowerPC, qemu, RealVNC, SOSP, sparc, TightVNC, UltraVNC, UML, UMLinux, Unix, User Mode Linux, virtual desktop, virtual machines, Virtual Private Server, VirtualBox, virtualisation, virtualization, vnc, Win4Lin, windows, wine, X11, X86, Xen, xenoserver, xensource

Video: Demo from Matthew Russell, Systems Engineering Regional Manager at ClearCube Technologies (VMworld Europe 2008)

March 4, 2008 by Robin Wauters 2 Comments

The interview below is part of our Virtualization Video Series, a recurring theme we want to implement on Virtualization.com featuring interviews with key players from the industry, event reports, etc.

This interview was recorded at VMWorld Europe 2008 in Cannes, France, and features a demo by Matthew Russell, Systems Engineering Regional Manager at ClearCube Technologies.

You might also be interested in watching the interview we did with Susannah Kirksey, VP Marketing at ClearCube.

DivX HD 1280×720 3.5mbit/s: Play (pop-up)
WMV HD 1280×720 3.5mbit/s: Play (pop-up)

Flash versions: Blip (embedded below), Dailymotion, Putfile, Revver, Sevenload, Vimeo, Youtube

Interviewer: Tarry Singh
Video blogger: Charbax

Filed Under: Interviews, People, Videos Tagged With: Clearcube, ClearCube Technologies, desktop virtualization, Matthew Russell, virtual desktop, virtualisation, virtualization, VMWorld, VMWorld 2008, VMWorld Europe 2008

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