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Sun takes second crack at desktop virtualization

Sun takes second crack at desktop virtualization

By:  Shane Schick  On: 19 Mar 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The company’s VDI 2.0 will go up against VMware, but a Canadian executive says telcos here are already embracing the technology for their PC users. An early adopter offers some advice

Canadian telecommunications firms are among the first to adopt desktop virtualization here, according to Sun Microsystems, which released an update to its own infrastructure software on Wednesday which will compete against the likes of VMware.

Sun Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) 2.0 is designed to allow users to access their full desktop environment from nearly any client device without installing software and includes support for virtual desktops based on the Solaris OS, Windows, Mac OS X or Linux and provides access from any supported client device, the company said. Sun introduced VDI last year.

Edward Moffat, a desktop solutions architect who works with Sun Microsystems of Canada in Markham, Ont., highlighted the public sector and financial services as two of the key verticals that might make use of Sun VDI 2.0. But he said the benefits of centralizing the management of desktop images could likely be applied to many other industries.

“The telcos are all doing this today at various levels,” he said. “Some have a couple of hundred (seats) and one I know has a couple of thousand seats.”

More in Network World Canada

Venture into virtualization with caution

While VMware has its own popular VDI product, Moffat said Sun has a couple of advantages over the competition. While desktop virtualization tools have been designed as “connection brokers” between one thing and another, Sun’s VDI works across multiple platforms.

“That flexibility takes a huge load off the IT shops, where intuitively you’d think the opposite – you’d think it would be more work to support these client devices,” he said.

Sun’s VDI also uses protocols optimized for wide-area network performance, rather than Microsoft’s remote desktop protocol (RDP). This could bring some advantages for companies that are using desktop virtualization across multiple continents.

“The large, national organizations (in Canada) have only two or three data centres. You don’t want to get standing up servers in every city across the country,” he said. “We have all these Internet providers along the lines of Bell, EDS and so on who are in a position to host desktop sessions in their two or three largest data centres.”

Vancouver-based TSI Terminal Systems has been using VMWare’s ACE enterprise desktop management product for provisioning virtual workstations in relation to a massive ERP rollout the company embarked on two years ago.

Michel Labelle, the company’s network and terminal support manager, said the key for Sun will be to offer something that complements other infrastructure provisioning and management tools. TSI, for example, uses not only VMware but Citrix as well.


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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