Citrix makes the desktop virtual with XenDesktop
Hoping to stay a step ahead of rival VMware,
Citrix
Systems is now shipping its XenDesktop
product line of desktop virtualization software.
Announced Tuesday at the company's annual Citrix
Synergy conference in Houston, XenDesktop comes in five editions, including
a free bare-bones Express Edition that will give small businesses and developers
a chance to test the product for as many as 10 users without having to worry
about licensing fees.
XenDesktop delivers the Windows desktop to clients over the network, using
virtual machine technology. These virtualized desktops are actually run on a
central server, making it easier for them to be managed by IT staff.
After having a virtual monopoly on remote Windows desktop connection software,
Citrix has been feeling some competitive heat lately from VMware. Analysts say
VMware's Virtual Desktop Infrastructure is still a year or two away from providing
stiff competition to Citrix, but the virtualization software vendor, which is
majority-owned by EMC, clearly has Citrix's attention.
In October of last year, Citrix spent US$500 million to acquire VMware competitor
XenSource. XenDesktop uses Xen's hypervisor software, and Citrix has a data
center product called XenServer that is based on XenSource's product.
Although XenDesktop takes a different approach from Citrix's older XenApp software
(formerly known as Presentation Manager), it is a similar type of product. With
XenApp, users are delivered applications, or even very basic Windows environments
called published desktops, from a central server.
Published desktops are generic and cannot be easily customized for individual
users. In contrast, XenDesktop gives the users a full-featured Windows environment,
but one that can still be centrally managed by IT staff.
This will make XenDesktop appealing to many more desktop users in the enterprise,
said David Roussain, Citrix's corporate vice president of virtualization marketing.
"We see that the desktop virtualization market is going to grow dramatically
over the next five years," he said. "Enterprises need to find a way
to dramatically lower the cost of delivering desktops in the corporation."
That need to centrally control desktops may appeal to very large companies
that are worried about things such as desktop policy compliance, but smaller
businesses will stick with Citrix's traditional products, which are widely used
to give workers remote access to applications, said Roman Gruzdev, CEO of IT
consultancy Sequentur, in Arlington, Virginia. "I mostly do small and medium
businesses, and for them, I don't see how it's going to be an advantage to have
XenDesktop."
Because it delivers a customized version of Windows, where things such as Windows
DLLs (Dynamic Link Libraries) can be changed, XenDesktop will make it easier
for some applications to run with XenApp. However, because the software is being
run remotely, there will still be limitations. Graphics programs that use a
lot of processor power may not work well in XenDesktop environments, for example.
And companies that are provisioning hundreds of presentation desktops on a
single XenApp server will have to add hardware to serve up that many versions
of Windows using XenDesktop. Roussain says a Citrix server that could provide
200 to 300 presentation desktops can handle maybe 30 virtual machine desktops
with XenDesktop.
The brewing fight between VMware and Citrix in the desktop virtualization market
will ultimately be a good thing for customers, said Brian Madden, an independent
industry analyst who publishes a popular desktop
virtualization blog. "For the past 10 years, Citrix was an absolute
monopoly. There was no one else at the enterprise level doing what Citrix was
doing," he said. We're going to go, for the first time, to market-driven
pricing versus monopoly-driven pricing."
In fact, some customers may already see signs of this in Tuesday's announcement.
Enterprise and Platinum XenDesktop customers get a free license to use XenApp
with their virtual desktops. Normally, XenApp costs $450 per concurrent Enterprise
user and $600 per Platinum license. That's more than the $295 and $396 that
Enterprise and Platinum XenDesktop users pay.
Available immediately, XenDesktop also comes in Standard and Advanced editions,
which cost $75 and $195 per concurrent user.
IDG News Service
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