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VMworld: Telus shows off virtual desktop success

VMworld: Telus shows off virtual desktop success

By:  Shane Schick  On: 02 Sep 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The Canadian telco giant helps VMware kick off its annual user event with a demonstration of how PC over IP can ease virtual client deployments. Plus: VMware’s Chargeback tool and vCloud APIs

SAN FRANCISCO — VMware Inc. brought one of Canada’s largest telecommunications companies and service providers to the stage of its international user conference Tuesday to show how its desktop virtualization software can be deployed within large enterprise environments.

Chris Renter, director of IT infrastructure at Burnaby, B.C.-based Telus Communications Co. was the lone customer to appear in the opening keynote of VMworld 2009, which is expected to draw more than 10,000 attendees over the next few days. Renter was here to discuss Telus’s use of VMware View, software launched last year that allows organizations to log into a server-based Windows desktop session via a Web browser or Java client running on thin or fat client hardware.

Renter said Telus has used VMware View internally to rapidly deploy more than 1,000 desktops across its employee base.

“We have this in one of our development centres and one of our contact centres,” he told the keynote crowd, adding that major events that congest traffic in B.C. – like the forthcoming 2010 Olympic Games – make virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) a more attractive proposition.

Telus’ demonstration included the use of PC over IP (PCoIP), a display protocol technology that VMware licensed from Teradici Corp. about a year ago. PCoIP will let VMware View include both server hosted virtual desktops and client virtual desktops that can run on a laptop or PC. This means VMware View can provide a more personalized view of users’ desktops from any device while still managing the fleet from the data centre. VMware CEO Paul Maritz described PCoIP as a major factor in making desktop virtualization, which has trailed the virtualization of servers, more ubiquitous.

“It’s really allowing centralization of corporate data,” Renter said.

Maritz asked Renter if, once Telus has gotten more used to deploying VMware View internally, it would offer virtual desktops as a service to its clients. “It’s definitely a possibility of something we could look at in the future,” Renter replied.

In an interview with ComputerWorld Canada just before VMworld 2009 began, Info-Tech Research Group Ltd. analyst John Sloan said he was hoping to see some traction on VDI and PCoIP from VMware.

“VMware and Citrix are pretty much neck-and-neck in terms of exploration by IT departments and the two were quite far ahead of any other competition,” he said. “If you’re in a horse race like this you don’t want it to look like development has stalled.”


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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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