VMware View Bolts On Additional Virtual Desktop Control (
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VMware
View 5 improves the end-user experience when employing PC over Internet
Protocol display-compression technology by adding throttling that cuts back
network usage. View 5 also added Persona, VMware’s entry into user-profile
management, a much-needed feature to keep up in the competitive virtual desktop
arena.
View
5 is focused on improving the user experience, including the release of View
client support for Mac and Android-based devices. While these changes
add functionality to View, much of the performance improvements that eWEEK Labs tests showed stemmed from new
ways to restrict features. In particular, PCoIP bandwidth controls make it
easier to smooth out View client network usage. The trade-off for this gain in
responsiveness is at least a temporary decrease in image fidelity.
Installing
and using VMware View 5 is no small task. Only organizations with significant
technology experts on staff and a strategic plan that calls for replacing
traditional desktop systems with virtual machines hosted in the data center
should consider installing View 5.
Successfully
rolling out View 5 will require senior engineers with expert implementation skills
in local- and wide-area networking, desktop deployment, storage, virtual and
physical system management, database and Active Directory planning and
management—at a minimum. On top of these technical experts, add license analysts
to thoroughly assess the VMware and end-user license costs of the project. The VMware
licensing upset that happened when vSphere 5 was released this summer
doesn’t significantly affect View 5 implementations. Virtual desktop
infrastructure, including vSphere 5 and vCenter Server, are licensed separately
from VMware’s server virtualization products when used for desktop deployments.
VMware
View 5 became available Oct. 14 and costs $150 per concurrent use for the
Enterprise license or $250 per concurrent use for the Premier license. The main
difference between the two license keys is that Premier users also get access
to the new View Persona user profile capability.
How I Tested the Technoloy
I
started off by spending a lot of time with the more than 700 pages of
documentation that come with View 5. Most of the work involved in setting up a
View 5 infrastructure should be figured out on paper long before the first
piece of View 5 infrastructure is in place.