SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Infrastructure >> Servers and Mainframes

Pano Logic chooses Toronto for regional HQ

Pano Logic chooses Toronto for regional HQ

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 10 Dec 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A California company manufactures “Zero Client Desktop Virtualization” hardware targeted at VMware shops. The CTO looks back on his Canadian roots and the local talent pool

Menlo Park, Calif.-based desktop virtualization provider Pano Logic Inc. announced Monday it’s expanding north of the boarder and opening an office in Toronto.

The decision to establish a Canadian headquarters, which will also service the East coast U.S. market, was motivated by the Greater Toronto Area’s large technology talent pool as well as the Canadian background shared by many of Pano Logic’s founding members. Former XenSource co-founder and current Pano Logic CEO Nick Gault was born in Montréal, while CTO Aly Orady was raised in Hamiliton, Ont. and attended McMaster University.

“I’m very happy to be re-establishing my roots with Canada and Toronto, particularly because I grew up and went to school here,” Orady said. “It’s really the perfect mix of talent and customer base and I couldn’t imagine opening up an office anywhere else.”

And with demand for technology professionals at an all-time high in California, Pano Logic hopes recruiting from the Toronto area talent pool can give them a leg up on others in the virtualization space.

More virtualization news from ComputerWorld Canada

Fusepoint works with VMware to manage virtual IT

“The Silicon Valley has got a high concentration of technology professionals and the talent is just being sucked up by top players like Cisco and Google,” Rob Lalonde, vice-president of East coast sales at Pano Logic and head of the new Toronto office, said. “In Toronto though, we have a very large talent pool without the same type of competition.”

In addition to recruitment advantages, Lalonde said the office’s close proximity to major East coast U.S. markets like Boston and New York was another deciding factor in the move.

“We’re fairly unique in that we’re a U.S.-based technology company putting our Northeastern presence in Toronto, where typically you would see office in the major East coast markets servicing those areas,” Lalonde said.

As for tapping into Toronto and the other major Canadian markets, Pano Logic hopes its flagship desktop virtualization product, the Pano device, will attract Canadian businesses looking to go beyond server virtualization and reduce their carbon footprint in the process.

The Pano is a small silver cube device that uses an USB and Ethernet port to connect to a virtual machine through VMware’s ESX server. The cube has no CPU, memory, operating system or drivers, which Pano Logic described as “a zero client with all the software residing in the server environment.” Users connect the device to a keyboard, mouse, and a monitor and are able to use Microsoft Windows Vista or XP from the remote server.

“You just plug it into the network and it works,” Orady said. “You never have to configure it, you never have to do a firmware update to it, and you never have to worry about it being infected by a virus because there’s no software on the device to be infected.”


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 2375   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

Related Content

Microsoft continues on virtualization roadmap
Microsoft continues on virtualization roadmapMicrosoft continues take on VMWare with a bevy of virtualization-related software and service announcements. Sun, Citrix and Virtual Iron have signed up for its server validation program and analyst Dan Kusnetzky weighs in on the news
Sneak peek: Windows Server 2008
Sneak peek: Windows Server 2008'A ton of little changes, but no real killer features,' says one analyst of the software that ships in February. But ending support for Server 2000 may drive adoption
Wanted: Virtualization experts
Wanted: Virtualization expertsLooking to upgrade your skills? Try getting into virtualization. What hiring managers are willing to do to get this know-how
Video: Inside Dell’s all-day Latitude laptop
dell announced the new latitude notebook lineup – including a breakthrough 19-hour extended battery life and the upcoming “always on, instant access” latitude on technology – via webcast on august 12.watch computer world canada’s video coverage of the media briefing held at canoe restaurant in toronto, on…

Comments (0)

No Comments!
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.