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ROI expectations at heart of virtual desktop war

ROI expectations at heart of virtual desktop war

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 17 Feb 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Executives from VMware, Microsoft, and Citrix were in Toronto on Wednesday to present their unique views on the desktop virtualization market. Here's what they had to say

With the server virtualization well on its way to widespread usage in enterprise IT shops, a new battle is being waged among vendors for your desktops.

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Alex Topitsch, director of advanced solutions at Woodbridge, Ont.-based IT services firm Soroc Technology Inc., said many of his clients are treating 2010 as a “business case year” for desktop virtualization. He said the benefits for clients include a more secure environment, better uptime for desktops, stronger data protection capabilities, and if done correctly, a financial benefit.

“The technology was a lot more mature than server virtualization when it first came on-board,” he said, adding that day one benefits include a consolidated and efficient desktop operating environment.

Historically, the biggest inhibitor to the technology has been the latency factor, especially when rolling out virtual desktops across geographically spread branch offices, he said. This issue has been addressed recently by a variety of vendors.

One such vendor looking to sell customers on the virtual desktop is VMware Inc.

Scott Davis, CTO of VMware’s desktop business unit, argued that desktop virtualization is now becoming mainstream, with many of its customers currently undertaking full-scale deployments.

“Of course, we’re still in the early days and we see more growing over the next few years,” he said. Every workload will be running in a virtual environment in a few years time, Davis added.

One common complaint being hurdled at virtualization vendors is that desktop virtualization projects will struggle to give enterprises a positive return on investment.

Topitsch said that companies should realistically expect to get a strong ROI within three to five years of a desktop virtualization rollout.

But for Davis, the cost savings can actually occur even faster.

“Desktop virtualization is not that compelling on the (capital expenditure) side,” he said. “It’s the operational benefits where virtualization really shines.”


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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.

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