Dell and Hewlett-Packard are using Citrix Systems’ Synergy 2010 show
to roll out new mobile products and services for their respective
desktop virtualization initiatives.
The Synergy 2010 conference is running May 12-14 in San Francisco.
Both OEMs are offering support for Citrix’s new
XenClient hypervisor technology, which is designed to extend Citrix’s
desktop virtualization capabilities deeper into the mobile space. Dell
is working to validate its Latitude laptops and OptiPlex desktops for
XenClient. For its part, HP is unveiling two business clients that
support XenClient.
They also are growing their services offerings around desktop virtualization.
The May 12 announcements come as the desktop
virtualization space continues to see rapid change, according to
Charles King, an analyst with Pund-IT Research.
“Initial solutions leveraged technologies like VMware
View to centrally support and manage multiple thin clientstyle desktops
with data center-based virtualized servers,” King said in a May 12
report focusing on Dell’s announcements. “But significant changes in
the marketplace, including Citrix’s 2007 acquisition of XenSource,
further enhancements to VMware View and Microsoft’s push behind its
Hyper-V virtualization technologies have shifted the desktop
virtualization playing field.”
OEMs such as Dell and HP now are extending desktop virtualization to traditional laptops and desktops.
“But why? To provide organizations a single, highly
efficient platform for centrally managing and provisioning all their
computers, including laptops used by highly mobile executives and sales
personnel, employee PCs and thin clients, and netbook-style devices
that are finding homes in both classrooms and businesses,” he said.
Dell’s new offerings show that the vendor wants to take advantage of all these opportunities, King said.
Dell is looking to become a preferred partner for
businesses looking to migrate to a virtualized desktop environment,
according to Steven Lalla, vice president and general manager of Dell’s
Client Product Group. Desktop virtualization has taken off in some
businesses—for example, call centers—and now more businesses are
looking to make the move.
They also are looking for help in figuring out what to implement and how to do it, Lalla said in an interview.
“More and more customers are continuing to think
about how to take this and implement it into the enterprise,” he said.
“What’s important to customers looking to do it is architecting it with
a partner.”
To that end, Dell, in its Flexible Computing
Solutions initiative, is now offering its Managed Virtual Client
service as a more comprehensive solution, thanks in large part to
Dell’s $3.9 billion acquisition of Perot Systems. Dell also is expanding the reach of the service to more countries in Europe.
In addition, Dell’s services capabilities now include
support for virtualized or streamed application delivery, as well as
customized user profiles.
Dell’s Virtual Remote Desktop already gives mobile
workers using desktop virtualization technology from VMware or Citrix a
full desktop-like experience, Lalla said. Now, for environments running
Citrix XenDesktop, Dell is offering a reference architecture.
The company also is rolling out new members of its
Latitude E-Family laptops—the E4310 ultraportable, and the E5410 and
E5510, and the 2110 for business customers. The Latitude 2110 is a
follow to the 2100, which was aimed at schools. The 2110 will fill a
need for affordable secondary computers for training workstations and
laptop users.
Along with the virtualization technology support, the
new Dell Latitude E4310, E5410 and E5510 offer the company’s new Fast
Response Free Fall Sensor and StrikeZone shock absorber to protect data
when the devices are dropped, new Core i processors from Intel, and
Windows 7 and WiMax support.
The E4310 also offers the capability for instant
access to e-mail, calendar, contacts and virtual desktops without
having to boot the system.
HP is rolling out its Compaq Elite 8000 desktop and
EliteBook 8440p notebook, both of which support Citrix’s XenClient
technology.
At the same time, HP, the top PC vendor in the world,
is unveiling the 4320t mobile thin client and said that its desk-based
thin clients now offer expanded multimedia capabilities.
HP also is offering new VDI (virtual desktop infrastructure)
reference architectures for Citrix’s XenDesktop and XenServer
technologies that improve the security and ease the management around
those environments.