Report: The World Needs To Wake Up To SAAS

automation technology

Despite software-as-a-service’s potential to be the next wave of IT, it is still a client-server world

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Main console of IBM's Virtual Desktop for Smart Business

The channel-enabled IBM enterprise-desktop package provides anytime/anywhere secure access to personal desktops on many devices—PC or Mac, Windows or Linux (SUSE, Ubuntu or Red Hat). It is designed primarily to run on IBM System x mainframes but works equally well on x86 servers, Antony Satyadas, IBM solution strategist, told eWEEK.

IBM brings system monitoring, help desk, collaboration, analytics and custom applications for ISVs to the table. IBM-sanctioned systems integrators, such as Novato, California-based CMI, supply the hosting capabilities, while Austin, Texas-based Virtual Bridges, with its Verde VDI control system, offers the management interface secret sauce that IBM required.

Virtual Bridges’ central management and reporting works through a single console; IBM estimates 200 desktops can be run from a single IBM server. Virtual Desktop for Smart Business can be deployed either on a customer’s own infrastructure or through a business partner-provided private-cloud environment.

The IBM Virtual Desktop (pictured above) enables Windows or Linux desktops to be hosted and managed centrally and will work with a range of devices, including tablets, netbooks, laptops, thin clients and servers. One caveat: It’s not yet optimised for smartphone screens.

“We’re seeing a great deal of interest in this from the health care industry, among others, because a lot of doctors and health practitioners want to use their iPads when doing their rounds,” CMI President Steve Giondomenica told eWEEK. “They don’t want to be tied down to a desk every time they want to look up a patient’s records. This new virtual desktop works very well with iPads and other tablet PCs.”

Citrix-Kaviza collaboration

Citrix long has been among the early leaders in this segment, and has a loyal and growing clientele. Its partner, Kaviza, began optioning its VDI software for hosted services in 2010. Users of mobile PCs – including notebooks, desktops, iPads, iPhones and Android smartphones – now can access virtualised Windows desktops using Kaviza’s virtual desktop agent along with Citrix Receiver.

Kaviza’s software is installed on a server with a hypervisor, Citrix Xen or VMware ESX 4.1, which enables enterprises to run Windows across multiple desktops from one or more company servers. Citrix can handle a hosted version through partners like Rackspace, NaviSite and others.

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California is currently testing a ground-breaking 250-seat, 1,250-account deployment consisting of a joint Citrix/Kaviza software package.

“It’s a secondary desktop [in a window] that any user can bring up on their screen; their desktop [client] is outside of enterprise-network boundaries,” Livermore National Lab’s IT manager and project lead Robin Goldstone told eWEEK. “Every time an employee checks in, he or she gets a completely fresh new virtual desktop. No business documents are ever retained on the client; it all stays in the data centre.

In mid-2010, Unisys came out with its own hosted enterprise VDI system that has been well-received by a number of enterprise customers in addition to its own internal staff, Patricia Titus (left), Unisys vice president and chief information security officer, told eWEEK.

“If we think highly of a particular technology, we always want to try it out on ourselves,” Titus said. “We created a consumerised version of the hosted desktop that uses lightweight apps that can go onto consumer devices [such as iPads, iPhones and others]. In fact, we created a BYOD-[Bring Your Own Device]-to-work program to give people device choices. Obviously, because we have the same challenges everybody else has, we need to do more with less.

“This is a new business for us. We’re really encouraged by the prospects,” she added.

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