Whats new in Horizon 6.2

Today at VMworld 2015, VMware announces the Horizon 6.2 release and the updates that will be available later this week. That’s right my fellow EUC nerds, we will not have to wait long to take advantage of these new little goodies. As great of an EUC story that VMware has built already, they have had multiple little things that plagued them when being compared to Citrix for certain customer requirements. This new release is going to help with several of these items and hopefully we won’t have to wait long for more to be released.

RDS Application Updates

Ever since VMware added the RDS functionality to Horizon in 2014 for shared desktops and application presentation I have been excited about the possibilities. They have improved on functionality in short bursts in the last 12 months, but even with that at times it felt like they were not closing gaps fast enough.

The Horizon 6.2 announcement today is going to close several of what most would can required gaps.

RDS Apps with Cloud Pod

I have to admit I’m not a big supported of the Cloud Pod architecture that is offered from VMware as a multi-site architecture, but the face that it was only for desktops in the past was silly. In the 6.2 update the Cloud Pod offering now supports global entitlements for applications and the associated placement and load balancing that has been available for desktops.

rds cloud pod

HTML Access for Cloud Pod

This is another item that many customers had not yet bumped into since the use of HTML as the primary access has been low. I am seeing a big interest in using HTML as the primary access method lately and will keep growing as the demand to use various endpoints increases. You will not get the same cloud pod experience when point a browser to the global URL as you did with the Horizon client in the past.

 

RDS Load Balancing

This is another spot where the initial method used in the first release was very basic and while it worked just did not offer customers the options that were available from Citrix. I’m happy to see this update as it will allow customers the ability to create intelligent session placement based on different values. I think that this type of update was pushed into the product by the recent hires that VMware made of people with Citrix experience.

rds lb

 

Linked Clones for RDS Servers

With this update you will now be able to use the linked clone functionality to build and maintain RDSH hosts for application and shared desktop functions. This was another gap that was missing in the VMware story. As great as features that Horizon has and with App Volumes added to the product offering, VMware still had a bad operational story for customers that wanted to build large application farms. With this update VMware now has a competitive story for customers comparing to Citrix XenApp with PVS.

I am personally excited for this feature and look to spend more time exploring and thinking about how it can be utilized in customer desgins.

composer linked clones

 

Security Updates

Between the base security updates that I touch on at the end of this post and the points below that are of more interest, it’s clear that VMware is listening to customers. Next up I think that VMware needs to focus on improving the security policy control around their products to make them more flexible to handle customer requirements.

Access Point

This is something that has been LONG overdue and I’m so happy that it’s finally here. No more Windows based security servers in the DMZ and no more edge access method that was different for every product that VMware released. Today I am happy to say that VMware will finally have a single edge based method for accessing all of their EUC services and it’s based on a Linux virtual appliance that can be scaled out.

access point

 

One Way Trusts

This has been a complaint of a few customers over time, and it looks like this constraint is gone also. Horizon will now be able to work with one day domain trust configurations.

1 way trust

 

GPU Updates

There are a number of GPU related updates in this version and I’ve been seeing a lot of interest in this area recently with customers. In what is being called vGPU 2.0 is support for the new NVIDIA generation of cards based on the Maxwell chips. I also hear that there will be a NVIDIA GPU option for blades soon and look forward to what that may offer to designs.

gpu1

 

AMD GPU Support

Not sure if this is worth getting excited about yet since it’s just vDGA and not vGPU yet. But the good news is that we are seeing non-NVIDIA support for GPU’s. This will really get exciting when they start to support the mid-grade GPU cards that can lower the cost for the base use cases that need limited GPU power.

gpu2

 

GPU for RDS Apps

Yes you heard me right, the GPU love is coming to hosted applications also. No longer will you only be able to offer GPU enabled workloads in a virtual desktop. While this may not be the main use case, there are certainly circumstances where the workload is better presented as an application than a desktp.

gpu3

 

Linux GPU Support

Starting to feel a little bit like Oprah, everyone gets GPU support. The GPU features are coming to Linux desktops also in the way of vGPU and vSGA.

linux gpu

 

Horizon Feature Updates

Now on to the more core feature updates in Horizon 6.2. In the previous version, we got our first look at client drive redirection, but it was only for Windows clients. This update brings the features to VDI and RDS with support for both Windows and Mac clients, with Linux in tech preview.

client drive

 

File Type Association

This was another one of those, Citrix can do it why cannot you items. Glad to see this get added is the ability to associate file types with published applications. This will allow the user to use the proper published application to open the file on their desktop without being force to open the app the find the file.

file assoc

 

4K Resolution Support

This is pretty self explanatory, there is now support for 4K monitor resolutions. As people invest in larger monitors and GPU enabled designs become more common, the need for higher displays will become common.

4k display

 

Other Updates

There are a number of other updates that are included in Horizon 6.2 that are less exciting to the masses that I will quickly summarize here. There were a number of security updates that make the platform Fed ready for more secure government regulated designs. There is now fully support for Windows 10 and Skype for business.

VMware Horizon 6 version 6.1

What’s New in This Release of Horizon 6 vmware-horizon-client

VMware Horizon 6 version 6.1 provides the following new features and enhancements:

  • NVIDIA GRID vGPU (shared GPU hardware acceleration)
    Available with vSphere 6.0 and later, this feature allows a physical GPU (graphical processing unit) on an ESXi host to be shared among multiple virtual desktops. With this new capability, Horizon 6 enables a wide variety of graphics use cases at significantly lower costs compared to physical workstations or previous releases of Horizon. The use cases enabled range from lightweight 3D task workers to high-end workstation graphics power users.
  • Smart Card for RDS desktops and Hosted Apps
    This feature enables users to authenticate to RDS-based desktops and RDS-based applications using smart cards.
  • Support for IPv6 networks
    Horizon 6 supports IPv6 networks in addition to IPv4 networks. The Horizon environment must be operated in either an IPv6 or IPv4 configuration; a mixed mode of operation is not supported. This release supports key components such as Horizon 6 servers, Horizon 6 VDI desktops and RDS hosts, and Horizon Client for Windows, as well as many Horizon 6 features. Not all Horizon 6 features that are supported in an IPv4 environment are supported in an IPv6 environment.
  • Support for Virtual SAN 6.0
    The Virtual SAN feature available with vSphere 6.0 and later releases contains many performance improvements over the feature that was available with vSphere 5.5 Update 1. With vSphere 6.0, this feature also has broader HCL (hardware compatibility) support. Leveraging the new capabilities of Virtual SAN 6.0, Horizon 6 is able to double the number of virtual machines that can run per ESXi host and deliver cost reductions and improved performance for virtual desktop workloads.
  • Support for Virtual Volumes
    Available with vSphere 6.0 and later releases, the Virtual Volumes feature allows vSphere to offload intensive storage operations such as snapshot creation, cloning, and replication. With this feature, virtual disks and their derivatives, clones, snapshots, and replicas are mapped directly to virtual volumes on the storage system. Implementation of Virtual Volumes depends on the availability of certified storage vendors.
  • View Administrator (UI) support for configuring Cloud Pod Architecture
    Administrators can use View Administrator (in addition to the lmvutil command) to configure and administer a Cloud Pod Architecture environment. Customers can also use View Administrator to view pod health and desktop session information.
  • USB Redirection of mass storage on RDS desktops and Hosted Apps
    This feature enables users to redirect their USB flash drive and hard disks to RDS Hosted Desktops and Applications. USB redirection of other types of USB devices, and other types of USB storage devices such as security storage drives and USB CD-ROM, is not supported. This feature is supported on Windows clients and Windows Server 2012 RDS hosts.
  • Windows Server 2012 R2 operating system support for VDI desktops
    Windows Server 2012 R2 (Datacenter edition) is now supported as a guest operating system for single-user, VDI desktops.
  • 3rd-Party SSO credential handling
    This feature enables 3rd-party SSO providers to access credential information when SSO is performed during a login to Horizon 6, allowing the 3rd-party solutions to be tightly integrated with Horizon 6.
  • Enhanced Message Security Mode
    With the new Enhanced message security mode, instead of signing and encrypting individual messages, messages are delivered through secure channels, bringing performance benefits by reducing the load on View Connection Server instances, security servers, virtual desktops, and RDS servers. Enhanced message security mode is enabled by default on new installations.
  • vSphere Transparent Page Sharing in Horizon 6
    In View Administrator, you can set the level of Transparent Page Sharing (TPS) that takes place on the ESXi host. The ESXi host can be set to eliminate redundant copies of memory pages at a virtual machine, pool, pod, or global level. This feature lets you determine how broadly to share pages (and hence reduce total memory consumption) based on the use case and the need to isolate users’ virtual machines.
  • Virtual hardware version 11 graphics memory configuration
    Horizon 6 now supports virtual hardware version 11, available in vSphere 6.0 or later versions. This feature is required for virtual machines that use NVIDIA GRID vGPU.
  • ViewDbChk utility to resolve database inconsistencies for Horizon 6 virtual machines
    Administrators can resolve inconsistencies in the databases (View LDAP, View Composer, and vCenter Server) that store information about desktop virtual machines. The utility can automatically identify and resolve configuration issues that previously could require manual intervention.
  • Supportability of Windows XP and Windows Vista guest operating systems as desktop virtual machines
    The versions of View Agent that ship with Horizon 6 (version 6.1) and later releases do not support Windows XP and Windows Vista desktops. The Horizon 6 (version 6.1) servers will work with Windows XP and Windows Vista desktops if you continue to use the older View Agent 6.0.2. The older agent, of course, does not offer all of the features of the new agent. For more details, see Retiring Old OSes: XP, Vista, Mac OS X 10.6 & 10.7.

VMware vSphere 6.0

Server scalability

With this release VMware has increased the scalability substantially. vSphere 6 clusters can now support 64 hosts with 8.000 virtual machines. vSphere 6 Hosts can now support 480 physical CPU’s and 12 TB of RAM, each host can now also support up to 1.000 virtual machines.

Sphere-6-Compute

You may wonder why VMware has done this, because there are no servers with these kind of specifications. VMware likes to be ready and sees the following use case:

  • Hadoop/Big Data Workloads
  • Scale-out applications will see greater consolidation ratios and improved performance with larger cluster sizes and greater virtual machine densities.
  • vSphere Big Data Extensions simplifies and automates the process of provisioning and configuring production Hadoop clusters.

Virtual Machine scalability

The virtual machine maximums have also increased substantially. In vSphere 4 VMware introduced the ‘Monster VM’ with 8 vCPU’s and 255GB of RAM. If that’s a ‘Monster VM’ a vSphere 6 (hardware version 11) virtual machine must be ‘GODZILLA’.

vSphere 6 - VM scalability

A virtual machine running hardware version 11 can now support:

  • With 128 vCPUs and 4 TB of RAM, vSphere 6 is capable of virtualizing even the most demanding applications.
  • Complete vNUMA support, including hotplug support. Currently, hot-add memory only gets added to region 0. This is changed to distributed the newly added memory according to the numa architecture.
  • WDDM 1.1 – Hardware acceleration of operations helps reduce memory footprint in Windows, because the Desktop Window Manager compositing engine no longer needs to keep a system memory copy of all surfaces used by GDI/GDI+, as it did in WDDM 1.0. WDM 1.1 is supported on Windows 7 and above.
  • xHCI 1.0 allows USB 3 devices to run at full speed.
  • Many customers wish to remove all unused devices from virtual machines, utilizing vHW11 customers can now remove serial and parallel ports. In addition customers can now add up to 32 serial ports to a virtual machine.

Use Case:

  • Business-Critical Applications (e.g. Oracle, SQL Server, Exchange, SAP HANA)
  • Virtualized scale-up applications will see greater performance as a result of the increased scale and configuration maximums
  • In virtualized SAP HANA environments, customers have seen 400% performance gains over RDBMS and 9x gains in planning load times as well as significant CapEx and OpEx savings versus non-virtualized environments. The Increased memory size made it possible to house the SAP HANA’s in- memory database in its entirety

vGPU graphics acceleration

vSphere 6 also includes support for NVIDIA GRID vGPU which delivers rich 3D graphics from the data center that can be easily accessed across devices and locations–more affordably than ever before.

VMware Horizon and vSphere 6 with NVIDIA GRID vGPU enables designers, architects and engineers to run the most advanced, graphics-rich applications in a remote desktop – using NVIDIA professional 3D graphics and certified application drivers. This graphics mode shares the DirectX and OpenGL support of VDGA with the density of VSGA. The best of both worlds.

Serial and Parallel Port Enhancements

Serial and parallel ports can now be removed from a virtual machine when using compatibility 6 (vHW 11). In addition, the maximum number of serial ports has been increased to 32. Security-conscious organizations like the ability to control all aspects of the hardware that the applications are running on. With vSphere 6.0, they can remove unused serial and parallel ports. Point-of-sale systems often require a large number of serial devices. With vSphere 6.0, each virtual machine can contain as many as 32 serial ports, enabling virtualization of more point-of-sale systems.

vSphere 6 vCenter Server

vCenter Server

The great news is, that the vCenter virtual appliance and the installable vCenter Server are on par. Meaning that the scalability and feature set of both vCenter versions are identical.

vCenter 6 - scalability

There is a minute difference in the supported databases though. The Windows installable vCenter Server supports Postgres and External SQL and Oracle DBs, the vCenter virtual appliance supports embedded Postgres and external Oracle DBs (so no external SQL).

  • Both the classic Windows installation and the vCenter Server appliance support all the new vCenter Server 6 scale numbers.
  • There is no longer a difference in scale between Windows and the Appliance!
  • Supported databases for the Windows installation are SQL 2008 R2, 2012 and 2014, Oracle 11g and 12c as well as the option to use an embedded vPostgres database.
  • vPostgres on Windows is limited to 20 hosts and 200 virtual machines. Upgrades where SQL express was installed will be converted to vPostgres.
  • The vCenter Server Appliance supports embedded vPostgres at full scale, 1000 host and 10,000 virtual machines and is the recommended database for the vCenter Server appliance.
  • The Appliance supports embedded Postgres or external Oracle Databases. Full scale is still supported when running the embedded Postgres database.
  • Customers can now deploy the version that makes sense for their business without worrying about sacrificing stability or scalability.
  • Customers can begin to move to the Appliance at their own pace while still having full interoperability between the Windows and Appliance vCenter Servers.

Platform Services Controller (PSC)

The Platform Services Controller (PSC) includes common services that are used across the suite. These include SSO, Licensing and the VMware Certificate Authority (VMCA).

The PSC removes services from vCenter and makes them centralized across the vCloud Suite. This gives customers a single point to manage all their vSphere roles and permissions along with licensing and reduces vCenter Server installation which enables faster install or upgrade to vSphere 6.

The PSC is the first piece that is either installed or upgraded. When upgrading a SSO instance becomes a PSC. There are two models of deployment, embedded and centralized.

  • Embedded means the PSC and vCenter Server are installed on a single virtual machine. – Embedded is recommended for sites with a single SSO solution such as a single vCenter.
  • Centralized means the PSC and vCenter Server are installed on different virtual machines. – Centralized is recommended for sites with two or more SSO solutions such as multiple vCenter Servers, vRealize Automation, etc. When deploying in the centralized model it is recommended to make the PSC highly available as to not have a single point of failure, in addition to utilizing vSphere HA a load balancer can be placed in front of two or more PSC’s to create a highly available PSC architecture.

PSC

Use of the embedded model is meant for standalone sites where this vCenter Server will be the only SSO integrated solution and replication to another PSC is not needed. The recommendation is to deploy external PSC’s in any environment where there is more then one SSO enabled solution (vCenter Server, vRealize Automation, etc) or where replication to another PSC, such as another site, is needed.

When performing an upgrade the PSC will be placed wherever SSO is currently.

Linked mode

Linked mode in previous versions was restricted to the Windows installation of vCenter Server only. This is no longer the case in vSphere 6. By using the PSC’s built in replication Windows and Appliance based vCenter Servers joined to the same SSO domain will be in vSphere 6 enhanced linked mode. Yes, the Appliance and Windows based vCenter Servers will be in enhanced linked mode simply by joining the same SSO domain.

This differs from what we had previously when pointing vCenter Servers at the same SSO server, in that scenario we only had a single pane of glass view, with vSphere 6 enhanced linked mode we have full replication of roles and permissions, licensing, tags, and policies.
vCenter Linked mode 

vSphere Client

The first major improvement because it irritated a lot of people, including me, the Windows installable vSphere Client now has the ability to manage virtual hardware 10 and 11 virtual machines. Any new feature to virtual hardware 10 and 11 are read only. Still one ‘missing feature’ ESXi patching using VUM still requires the regular Windows installable vSphere Client.

vSphere client features

Another frustration for a lot of people was the Web Client performance. VMware put the vSphere Web Client went through extensive optimization around both performance and usability.

Performance

On the performance side engineering went screen by screen optimizing every query being made back to the Inventory Service, and SSO. This resulted in 13 times faster login. Right click menus appear and are useable 4 times faster. And most tasks are now at least 50% faster. Performance charts now render and are usable in less then half the time.

VMRC has also been integrated, now administrators can perform the same actions from a virtual machine console as they did in the Windows client. Below is a chart which shows the improvements made, feature by feature.

vSphere Client performance

Looking at the chart the blue lines represent the time in milliseconds an operation took in previous web client versions.

NOTE: Firefox is still a supported browser but the performance when using it is 3-4 times slower compared to using Chrome or Internet Explorer. So do NOT use FireFox.

The vSphere Web Client is the client going forward. In this release VMware has made significant gains in performance bringing it on-par with the Windows Client.

Usability

On the usability side improvements include an enhanced “Home” button. Simply hover over it and you can get to any area in the Web Client in a single click. Also, the Right Click Menu has been flattened and to make getting to where you need as fast and easy as it was in the vSphere Client.

VMware moved the recent tasks list back to the bottom, allowing for more information to be displayed and a more consistent feel when compared to the vSphere Client. And lastly the UI is dockable. You can re-arrange your screen layout in anyway you want.

Content Library

Centralized repository that provides simple and effective management for content including virtual machine templates, ISO images and scripts. With vSphere Content Library, it is now possible to store and manage content from a central location and share through a publish/subscribe model.

Many organizations have several vCenters servers across diverse geographic locations, and on these vCenters there is most likely a collection of templates and ISOs. Currently there is function within vCenter to centrally manage the templates and distribute them to all locations. The Content Catalog provides the ability to centrally manage content and ensure it’s distributed across the infrastructure.

Content Library vCenter’s Content Library provides simple and effective management for:

  • VM templates
  • vApps
  • ISO images
  • Scripts

 There are three types of Catalog Libraries

  • Local Catalog – Local only to the local vCenter
  • Published Catalog – A local library that is published for catalog subscribers
  • Subscribed Catalog – A library that syncs with a published library

There are also two types of subscriptions to a published catalog.

  • Immediate Download (aka Automatic Subscription) – The entire contents of the published catalog are copied to the subscriber.
  • On-Demand – Instead of downloading all the data at once, only the metadata is downloaded as a reference to the content on the published library. This allows the administrator to download full catalog items only when needed by synchronizing individual items of within the catalog.

Here are some of the technical details for the Content Library.

  • The Content Library and Transfer service are the main services and are included as part of vmware-vdcs which is the Virtual Datacenter Service that is installed as part of the vCenter Management Node.
  • The Content Library Service is responsible for keeping track of the metadata of all the Content Libraries it is in charge of as well as checking for updates on a publisher.
  • The Transfer Service does most of the heavy lifting and is called by the Content Library Service to copy content between libraries
  • The Content Library also utilizes the same database as vCenter, that is the VCDB.
  • If stored on a datastore, 64TB is the maximum size
  • Maximum of 256 content items per library.
  • Maximum of 10 simultaneous copies.
  • Synchronization occurs once every 24 hour.

Expanded Guest OS Support

VMware vSphere 6.0 also introduces support for the following guest operating systems:

  • Oracle Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel Release 3 Quarterly Update 3.
  • Asianux 4 SP4.
  • Solaris 11.2.
  • Ubuntu 12.04.5.
  • Ubuntu 14.04.1 • Oracle Linux 7 • FreeBSD 9.3.
  • Mac OS X 10.10.

A full list of supported guest OSs can be found at here.

VMware Horizon Client for Linux 3.2

vmware-horizon-clientKey Features

VMware Horizon Client for Linux makes it easy to access your Windows virtual desktop from a supported Linux system with the best possible user experience on the Local Area Network (LAN) or across a Wide Area Network (WAN).

  • Support for Ubuntu 12.04 or 14.04, Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 6.5, SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop (SLED) 11 SP3, and CentOS 6.5 – The Horizon Client 3.2 installer provides support for these operating systems.
  • Unmatched performance – The adaptive capabilities of the PCoIP display protocol are optimized to deliver the best user experience, even over low-bandwidth and high-latency connections. Your desktop is fast and responsive regardless of where you are.
  • Simple connectivity – Horizon Client for Linux is tightly integrated with VMware Horizon for simple setup and connectivity.
  • Secure from any location – At your desk or away from the office, your data is delivered securely to you wherever you are. Enhanced certificate checking is performed on the client. Horizon Client for Linux also supports optional RADIUS and RSA SecurID authentication.

What’s New in This Release

  • Support for additional operating systems with the client installer — The new client installer provides both a graphical UI and a command-line UI for silent installations on the supported operating systems. See Before You Begin.
  • New UI for selecting which monitors to use for Horizon Client – If you specify that you want to use all monitors, and if you are using the PCoIP display protocol, you can specify a subset of adjacent monitors to use.
  • Persistent settings in location-based printing — Printer settings for location-based printers are retained after a user logs out or disconnects from the desktop. After the user logs in to the desktop again, the location-based printer continues to use the previously configured settings. The remote desktop must have View Agent 6.0.2 installed.

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Horizon View 5.3.1 Is Here and Supports VMware Virtual SAN

By Narasimha Krishnakumar, Product Management, End-User Computing, VMware

On behalf of everyone in the End-User-Computing (EUC) team at VMware, I’m proud to bring to you an exciting product announcement from EUC, just in time for the other Virtual-SAN-related announcements from VMware!

Today, VMware announced the General Availability (GA) of VMware Virtual SAN 5.5 and I’d like to take a moment to also introduce Horizon View 5.3.1. With this release, we are continuing the tradition of rapidly introducing innovations to market. And, now, the details:

 

  • Horizon View 5.3.1 supports VMware Virtual SAN 5.5. VMware Virtual SAN 5.5 is a component of VMware vSphere 5.5U1.
  • Horizon View 5.3.1 when used with VMware Virtual SAN 5.5 has been shown to reduce the total CAPEX cost of storage by up to 50%.
  • Horizon View 5.3.1 GA is intended for use with Virtual SAN 5.5 datastores only. There are no other new features in Horizon View 5.3.1 besides support for Virtual SAN 5.5.
  • Customers can purchase a Virtual SAN 5.5 license to deploy Horizon View 5.3.1.

Using Horizon View 5.3.1 with Virtual SAN 5.5

Using Horizon View 5.3.1 with Virtual SAN 5.5 is a simple three-step process:

1. Set up a cluster of vSphere 5.5U1 nodes (minimum 3) with at-least one SSD and one hard disk in each of the nodes. It is best to use the same number of drives on each ESXi node and keep the environment homogeneous.

2. Enable Virtual SAN using the vSphere Web Client interface as shown in Figure 2. Select Turn ON Virtual SAN.

vmware-virtual-san-horizon-view-1

Figure 2: vSphere Web Client Interface Showing Cluster Settings

3. Create a Horizon View desktop pool using the standard workflow. When presented with the option to select a datastore for virtual machines, select the datastore with type vsan as shown in Figure 3.

vmware-virtual-san-horizon-view-2

Figure 3: Selecting a Virtual SAN Datastore

After these steps are performed, Horizon View 5.3.1 will start using the vsanDatastore to store the VMDKs of the virtual desktops, delivering an ultra-low desktop TCO and great end-user experience.

For more details on deploying and using Virtual SAN 5.5 with Horizon View 5.3.1, refer to the Knowledge Base article Horizon View 5.3.1 on VMware Virtual SAN – Quick Start Guide.

For the latest performance results on Horizon View 5.3.1 with VMware Virtual SAN, see VDI Performance Benchmarking on VMware Virtual SAN 5.5.

V3 Systems will be acquired by Sphere 3D

We are very excited to announce our being acquired by Sphere 3D!!!

Since day one at V3 Systems we have been focused on moving desktops to the cloud where they belong. As we began, the hurdle of performance was the biggest deterrent, particularly at scale. As an appliance company with drop in guaranteed performance we received almost instant validation. It has been exciting as we have grown to watch as the industry moved from disbelief to an expectation of performance.

As a combined company yet wholly owned subsidiary of Sphere 3D we are excited to continue our pursuit of moving desktops to the cloud where they belong. We have talked for a long time about the belief going back to the early desktop days of Windows and Apple that my desktop should be available to me where ever I am. The benefits of a cloud based managed desktop moves desktop and mobile device management to a place where it is both affordable for everyone and realistic to have desktops and applications which are available anytime, anywhere, outperforming “physical desktop only” architectures in every way.

Sphere 3D brings a lot to our table and it will be very exciting to participate as new architectures which bring us closer to our desktops and applications conforming to our environment become available through service providers and partners showing us how content is best produced from the desktops we are familiar with, but with new features which only cloud based applications and desktops can provide.

As a startup in VDI we have had to deal with the successes and failures of so many of those that came before us. It seems there will be many that are the critics as well as the advocates that almost seem to flip flop when it comes to predicting success and failure of desktops and their roles in the cloud. We have read as the mobile world has brought about many that say the desktop world is shrinking while the mobile device world is growing. We have seen only growth when it comes to all of the growth and predicted growth as we describe what is really happening as a holistic content creation and management solution which incorporates the desktop, applications, and the information we interact with and become available in the way we want it, when we want it, where every we might be, utilizing the best devices and technologies available at the time.

This new combined relationship with Sphere 3D brings mobile application technology which when combined with V3’s Desktop Cloud Orchestration technology brings true hybrid Desktop as a Service as well as hybrid Applications as a Service where the lines between on premise systems, local systems, and cloud systems blur together to become just MY system and my ability to be productive once again increases exponentially.

V3 Systems and Sphere 3D bring together thought leadership in virtualization, applications, desktops, management, appliances, and service providers that will continue to grow quickly so that you can package your desktop, application, and information experience into the ways which best suit you and your environment. Whether you are just wanting a virtualized application experience on premise, local, and in the cloud linked with your perspective information, or want to add the desktop availability and management to your complete experience, any IT department, small company, or the largest enterprise will be able to simply create policies like never before which change how we look at our content creation experience as well as how we view and interact with the information we produce and use every day.

Truly we are excited about this acquisition and view it as not an exit, but as an ideal marriage for a next phase of growth and development. Now that the performance bar has been raised for desktops, and applications, can we raise it again? Yes!!!!! Can we deliver never before seen levels of SLAs which are not just competitive, but deliver experiences in services which have not been available to many market places before? Yes!!!!

Watch as this story continues to unfold and more great stuff rolls out. It will begin to happen quickly and will continue to be a great ride as our passion to move desktops and applications to the cloud continues to show how old metrics are outdated and need revision. We look forward to sharing our new stuff with you and hearing your ideas and feedback as great new architectures unfold for the marketplace before us.

Click Here to read the press release.

Virtual Desktops V3 Video

Virtual Desktops allow you to compute from wherever, however, and whenever. Whether that is on an iPad, thin client, or phone. V3 Systems is the hardware and software that makes virtual desktops possible. For more information on how you can test out your own virtual desktop please visit www.v3sys.com