mandag 26. april 2010

NComputing launches low-cost thin client that acts like a full Windows PC

NComputing is unveiling today a “thin client” computer which costs just $200 but acts like a full-fledged Windows PC for the enterprise.
The L300 — the latest in a series of models — is a little box that connects to a standard Windows computer and uses that PC as a server, allowing a bunch of users to share one computer through NComputing’s distributed computing software. The box, in turn, is connected to a keyboard, mouse and monitor.
The client taps the computing power of the PC, just like old terminals shared a slice of the computing power of a mainframe computer decades ago. With the L300, as many as eight clients can share a $700 PC. Each one of those clients can simultaneously run a 1080p high-definition video while sharing a single PC, said Stephen Dukker, chief executive of NComputing.
“The aim is to deliver a true PC experience,” he said.
The L300 is the first NComputing product that uses the company’s new Numo chip, which helps reduce the cost of computing dramatically by combining distributed computing with its vSpace virtualization software, which allows a computer to be subdivided so that it can serve different users. The L300 is targeted at the enterprise market, where companies can enable lots of workers to get on the Internet or company network without much expense.
With typical enterprise PCs, you have to pay a lot of licensing costs per machine, such as licenses for each copy of Windows running, Dukker said. But with NComputing, the cost is lower because users are sharing a single copy. But there are some things that the L300 can’t do which a PC can, such as running games. Of course, companies may like that fact since employees can’t goof off at work.
To date, NComputing has more than 20 million daily users for its virtual desktops, which are in use in developing countries. India uses the devices in a number of schools as well as government agencies. Full told, NComputing has more than 600,000 commercial deployments of its thin clients. Dukker argues that virtual computers can save 75 percent in capital costs, 75 percent in operating costs, and 90 percent in energy consumption compared to PCs.
Dukker says the solution works whether you are deploying four computers in a remote office or 4,000 in a corporate headquarters. As a promotion, NComputing is giving away 1,000 devices at this week’s Interop conference in Las Vegas. Volume shipments of the L300 are expected to begin in April.
we are strong in bric countries. tremendous success in india. vdi revolution is reaching the mainstream. there has never been case when a tech that
cost 3-4 times has been accepted. that is why corporate virtualization has not taken off yet.
vspace
Companies: NComputing

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