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Posted: Tuesday 25 August 2009 - 3 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: VIZION

VDI

 

www.dabcc.com/media.aspx 

 

OK, every now and then, we all need to TOOT our own horn a bit. So, here is a new Podcast I recorded for Douglass Brown (yes, a vdi.com patron member!!) that just posted today.

 

About 54 minutes long, however, hoping you all enjoy!!


T.Rex

Posted: Saturday 22 August 2009 - 0 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: VIZION
Posted: Sunday 16 August 2009 - 1 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: VIZION

 viewyonder.com/2009/08/16/feeding-the-it-shriekometer-5-vdi-anti-patterns/

 

Thanks to Steve Kaplan on TWITTER for finding this... thanks to ViewYonder for a very intelligent piece !

 

 

Posted: Tuesday 11 August 2009 - 5 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: VIZION

www.pcworld.com/article/170038/vmware_loses_its_magic.html 

Wow...where to begin. In the interest of proper disclosure, VMware did buy my last company and i did work there as a desktop subject matter expert for 14 months, however, that also gave me insight into the inner workings of the company that DEFINED the virtualization market.

No, VMware has not lost its mojo. It is going through the growth curve every company does when it creates radical new technology, spawns a multi billion dollar market, sees competition enter, and defends.

Pundits beat these companies up, because it sounds and sells more than RA ! RA ! RA !

I had a typewriter.

I had a calculator.

I had a PC.

IBM, Texas Instruments, and Dell are all still here.

So, now i have VDI. 

10 Years from now, VMware will be here, MOJO in tact.

And we will be beating up some other new technology innovator who has grown from the garage to IPO.

Just my $.02

T.Rex

Posted: Tuesday 11 August 2009 - 1 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: VIZION

So, i read this...

news.idg.no/cw/art.cfm 

then thought this...

If MSFT truly is, and i have heard this on first hand account, not thrilled and uncaring, and maybe even hostile towards VDI, ala their pricing schema for windows Os's inside of desktop VMs .. well, we have all chased the fabled linux desktop like we search for unicorns...so, what if 

 

GOOGLE ANDROID is the new desktop OS??

Hmmmm..why not?

blog.bobpeers.com/2009/02/12/google-android-in-virtualbox/

 

 

 

 

Posted: Sunday 9 August 2009 - 6 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: VDI DOCS

©2008 Cisco | VMware. All rights reser ved. Page 1
Joint Cisco and VMware® Solution for Optimizing Virtual Desktop Delivery
Cisco Wide Area Application Services and Application Control Engine Optimize Delivery of VMware Virtual Desktop Infrastructure Across the Enterprise
What You Will Learn
Cisco® Wide Area Application Services (WAAS) and Cisco Application Control Engine (ACE) with VMware® Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) reduces the cost and complexity of managing desktops by optimizing virtual desktop delivery over the WAN while avoiding costly bandwidth upgrades.

This jointly validated solution improves employee productivity by combining VMware VDI for virtualizing and centralizing desktops and Cisco WAAS for compressing and accelerating Microsoft Remote Desktop (RDP) and optimizing branch-office printing.

Cisco WAAS increases the scalability and number of VMware VDI users supported over the WAN, and Cisco ACE improves the availability and scalability of data center VMware VDI.

Enterprise business continuity is improved by reducing the amount of time required for backup and replication of data center VMware VDI.
Business Challenges
Customers use desktop virtualization solutions such as VMware VDI to replace traditional PCs with virtual machines that are managed from the data center to reduce operating costs, increase control of desktop management, and extend business continuity and disaster recovery to enterprise desktops.
However, when desktop virtualization solutions are deployed over the WAN, latency and bandwidth constraints limit the effectiveness of virtual desktop solutions. Customers face the following challenges in deploying virtual desktop solutions for the enterprise:

Poor performance of RDP over the WAN, affecting employee productivity

High bandwidth consumption, increasing solution costs

Limited scalability, reducing the number of users that can be supported

Poor performance of centralized printing and increased costs of printing at the branch office

Considerable time and bandwidth required for transfer of virtual images, affecting business continuity

Need to maintain continuous availability within and across the data center for the VMware VDI solution

High server resource consumption for Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) functions, resulting in a large number of servers
VMware VDI Overview
VMware VDI is an integrated desktop virtualization solution that delivers enterprise-class control and manageability. VMware VDI, built on the industry-leading VMware Infrastructure, provides an efficient and reliable environment for virtual desktops.
The VMware VDI solution consists of the following components (Figure 1):

VMware Infrastructure 3 Enterprise software, which provides a platform for hosting virtual desktops including the VMware ESX and VMware ESXi software

VMware Virtual Desktop Manager (VDM), a desktop management server that securely connects users to virtual desktops in the data center and provides an easy-to-use web-based interface for managing the centralized environment

VMware VDM Client, which runs on a Microsoft Windows PC and allows users to connect to virtual desktops through VMware VDM; VMware VDM Clients of VMware VDM certified thin clients connect using Microsoft RDP
Figure 1.
VMware VDI Solution Components
Cisco WAAS Overview
Cisco WAAS is a comprehensive WAN optimization solution that accelerates applications over the WAN, delivers video to the branch office, and provides local hosting of branch-office IT services. Cisco WAAS allows IT departments to centralize applications and storage in the data center while maintaining LAN-like application performance and to provide locally hosted IT services while reducing the overall branch-office device footprint.
©2008 Cisco | VMware. All rights reserved. Page 2
Cisco WAAS enables organizations to accomplish four primary IT objectives:

Application acceleration: Improve productivity of remote employees.

IT consolidation and WAN optimization: Reduce branch-office IT costs.

Branch-office IT agility: Provide local branch-office IT services such as printing without additional servers.

Simplified data protection: Ease compliance and business continuity.
The Cisco WAAS solution provides application-specific acceleration and hosted services validated by application vendors, proven network integration that preserves existing network services and simplifies operations, and lower overall cost of ownership
Cisco ACE Overview
Cisco ACE provides core server load-balancing services; application acceleration through server offloading; and security services to maximize application availability, performance, and security. The Cisco ACE is coupled with an innovative virtualized hardware platform, application-specific intelligence, powerful performance, and granular role-based administration. By delivering up to 16 Gbps of throughput and support for up to 4 million TCP concurrent connections, the Cisco ACE can handle large production environments and be partitioned for sharing across multiple application or service environments. Using Cisco ACE, IT departments are better positioned to achieve the following business benefits:

Improved application availability and scalability

Cost reduction through virtualization

Improved application performance using server offloading
Joint VMware and Cisco Solution
The jointly tested and validated solution from Cisco and VMware optimizes virtual desktop delivery and consists of the following components (Figure 2):
Figure 2.
VMware VDI Solution Components ©2008 Cisco | VMware. All rights reserved. Page 3

VMware VDI and VMware VDM to virtualize and centralize desktops

The virtual desktops hosted on VMware Infrastructure 3 Enterprise in the data center

The VMware VDM Connection Server allows remote branch users to connect to their virtual desktops in the data center running on VMware ESX Server.

Cisco WAAS to accelerate RDP performance and reduce bandwidth demands

Cisco WAAS, deployed on both sides of the WAN optimizes RDP traffic between the end users and the data center using a sophisticated combination of TCP optimizations that reduce the effects of the WAN, persistent session-based compression, and data redundancy elimination. Cisco WAAS is used to optimize VMware VDI delivery, including Microsoft RDP, the underlying protocol used by the current version of VMware VDM and currently the predominant protocol used by the various virtual desktop implementations.

The data center also hosts a Cisco WAAS Central Manager, which is used to manage the Cisco WAAS solution from a central point.

The branch-office Cisco WAAS appliance provides print services locally to branch-office users by running Microsoft Windows print services.

Cisco WAAS can be deployed between data centers to optimize backup of VMware VDI for disaster recovery (not shown in Figure 2).

Cisco ACE to improve availability and scalability of data center VMware VDI infrastructure

The Cisco ACE appliance load balances virtual desktop connections among multiple VMware VDM Connection Servers based on application response time, providing scalability and resiliency to the VMware VDI solution.

Cisco ACE reduces the number of VMware VDM Connection Servers required by offloading SSL functions to the network. With reduced costs due to SSL offloading, customers can more easily afford to adopt SSL for VMware VDI applications. Cisco ACE also enables centralized management of SSL certificates.

Cisco ACE virtualization enables customers to partition a physical Cisco ACE device into multiple isolated virtual Cisco ACE devices, each with all the capabilities of the physical device. This virtualization capability facilitates data center consolidation, reducing the number of load balancers needed and reducing power and cooling requirements.

The Cisco ACE appliance is typically deployed in front of the VMware VDM Connection Servers.
Solution Benefits
Performance Acceleration
The combined solution accelerates the performance of all applications accessed through VMware VDI, such as Microsoft Exchange for email and calendars and the use and sharing of Microsoft Office do***ents such as Microsoft PowerPoint, Excel, and Word, as well as enterprise websites.

Cisco WAAS accelerates VDI performance by 70 percent (Figure 3).

Cisco WAAS provides near-LAN performance for VMware VDI over the WAN.
©2008 Cisco | VMware. All rights reserved. Page 4
Figure 3.
Performance for 1.5-Mbps WAN, 100 milliseconds (ms) round-trip time (RTT), and 15 Virtual Desktop Users
Bandwidth Optimization
A single enterprise virtual desktop user can consume more than 300 Kbps of bandwidth, increasing WAN costs and degrading the end-user experience (Figure 4).
Cisco WAAS reduces RDP bandwidth demands by 70 percent, saving expensive WAN costs.
Figure 4.
WAN Bandwidth Reduction: 1.5 Mbps, 100 ms, Single User ©2008 Cisco | VMware. All rights reserved. Page 5
Availability
An individual VDM Connection Server does not provide adequate availability in the event of hardware or software failure. To help ensure continuous availability, multiple VDM Connection servers are required for the VMware VDI solution.

Cisco ACE monitors the health of the application and load balances the traffic to any available VMware VDM Connection Server.

Cisco ACE maintains the affinity between the client and the VMware VDM Connection Server using session persistence.

Cisco ACE improves availability by replicating connection and persistence information to the standby server and providing instant application service failover.
Scalability
A T1 or 1.5-Mbps WAN link can support fewer than 10 users using native RDP, making virtual desktop deployment prohibitively expensive for many customers.

Cisco WAAS increases the number of VMware VDI users that can be supported on a given infrastructure by 4 times (Figure 5).

Cisco WAAS provides uniform, scalable performance for all users. With native RDP, the user experience rapidly degrades with the addition of users.

Cisco ACE improves the scalability of the data center VMware VDI infrastructure. As additional users are migrated from traditional PCs to virtual desktops in the data center, increasing numbers of VDM Connection Servers are required.

Cisco ACE exposes only one virtual IP address for users to connect to regardless of the number of VMware VDM Connection Servers in the data center and load balances user requests across them.

Cisco ACE reduces CPU and memory use on VMware VDM Connection Servers by offloading SSL functions to the network, thereby freeing resources to handle more users.

With virtualization, Cisco ACE can also be used to load balance other applications in the data center without affecting the VMware VDI solution.
©2008 Cisco | VMware. All rights reserved. Page 6
Figure 5.
Effect of Additional Users on Session Response Time
Optimized Printing
Customers face considerable challenges in printing in VMware VDI environments since the printer at the branch office and the virtual desktop image at the data center are separated by the WAN. Using Cisco WAAS, customers have flexible choices for selecting the right print topology for their environments.

Cisco WAAS accelerates centralized print through printing-specific optimizations, data reduction, compression, and TCP optimizations to provide more than 70 percent improvement.

Cisco WAAS provides a Microsoft Windows Server printer option on branch-office Cisco WAAS appliances, saving the cost of additional servers at the branch office.
Accelerated Backup and Virtual Image Transfer
Virtual machine images are backed up or transferred across the WAN as part of deployment and management of VMware VDI infrastructure (Figure 6).

Cisco WAAS accelerates transfer of virtual machine images by 50 times.
©2008 Cisco | VMware. All rights reserved. Page 7
Figure 6.
Transfer of Virtual Machine Image over a T1 Link with 100-ms Latency
Business Benefits
The joint Cisco and VMware solution optimizes VMware VDI delivery and allows customers to achieve the benefits of VMware VDI by providing the following features:

Near-LAN performance for virtual desktops over the WAN, improving performance by 70 percent

Increased scalability of the number of VMware VDI clients, increasing the number of clients supported by 2 to 4 times, and massive scalability of VMware VDI and VMware VDM data center infrastructure

60 to 70 percent reduction in WAN bandwidth requirements

Optimization of printing over the WAN by 70 percent, with the option of a local print server hosted on the Cisco WAAS appliance

Improved business continuity by accelerating virtual image backup by up to 50 times and reducing bandwidth by more than 90 percent
Conclusion
Cisco and VMware have worked together to deliver this joint solution, collaborating on lab setup, solution testing, and validation of test results. Cisco and VMware jointly validate that the lab setup and solution testing represent best efforts in creating a realistic customer deployment and accurate do***entation of such deployment.
Cisco and VMware recommend that customers use this jointly tested and validated solution to deploy optimized, scalable virtual desktop solutions to reduce infrastructure costs and improve management control.
©2008 Cisco | VMware. All rights reserved. Page 8
©2008 Cisco | VMware. All rights reserved. Page 9
Cisco and VMware intend to continue to enhance this partnership to develop joint solutions for optimizing virtual desktop delivery in the enterprise.
For More Information

Cisco Application Networking Services for VMware: http://www.cisco.com/go/optimizevmware
● Cisco Application Networking Services: http://www.cisco.com/go/applicationservices
● Cisco Application Networking partner portal: http://www.cisco.com/go/optimizemyapp
● Cisco WAAS Software product information: http://www.cisco.com/go/waas
● Cisco ACE product information: http://www.cisco.com/go/ace
● VMware virtual desktop product information: http://vmware.com/products/desktop_virtualization.html
● VMware VDI product information: http://vmware.com/products/vdi/
©2008 Cisco | VMware. All rights reserved. Page 10
For more information, visit: www.vmware.com
Cisco Systems, Inc. 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA www.cisco.com Tel: 408 526-4000 800 553-NETS (6387) Fax: 408 527-0883
VMware, Inc 3401 Hillview Ave Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA www.vmware.com Tel: 1-877-486-9273 or 650-427-5000 Fax: 650-427-5001
Copyright © 2008. VMware, Inc. All rights reserved. Protected by one or more U.S. Patent Nos. 6,397,242, 6,496,847, 6,704,925, 6,711,672, 6,725,289, 6,735,601, 6,785,886, 6,789,156, 6,795,966, 6,880,022, 6,944,699, 6,961,806, 6,961,941, 7,069,413, 7,082,598, 7,089,377, 7,111,086, 7,111,145, 7,117,481, 7,149, 843, 7,155,558, 7,222,221, 7,260,815, 7,260,820, 7,269,683, 7,275,136, 7,277,998,7,277,999, 7,278,030, 7,281,102, 7,290,253, 7,356,679 and patents pending.
Cisco, the Cisco logo, and Cisco Systems are registered trademarks or trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the United States and certain other countries. All other trademarks mentioned in this do***ent or Website are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership relationship between Cisco and any other company. (0807R) C11-494994-00 09/08

Posted: Monday 3 August 2009 - 1 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: VDI Events

This year, i want to be blown away at VMworld. I am going into it with a 1000% open mind. There are soooo many new compelling technologies for provisioning, managing, optimizing, platform plays, profile plays, protocols, etc.

So...who will have the killer app?

2007-VDI is coming

2008-VDI is real

2009-VDI has work to do, however, we see the light, and it aint a freight train.

2010-We have seen this movie before, and now it is time to emerge from Test/Dev, P.O.C, Pilot, Bake-Off's and solve isolated use cases

So...who helps us get there???