Nov 13 2008

Blackberry Bold – the good the bad and the great

Published by Steve Richards under Main

image My trustworthy Blackberry 8800 was upgraded to a Bold last week and after much anticipation I can definitely say it’s been a very worthwhile upgrade.  I’ve made these notes which might help anyone considering or receiving a bold in the near future.

Background

I’ve previously been an enthusiastic user of a Palm Treo 650, a not so enthusiastic user of various Windows Mobile Smartphones and a pretty happy user of a Blackberry 8800.  I can safely say that the Bold has the best attributes of all of these devices with few if any of the downsides.  My wife has an iPhone 3G and despite it winning over the bold in terms of sheer style and “conceptual integrity” the bold wins out for me in terms of good old fashioned performance and functionality.

The hardware

Overall the Bold seems slightly larger than the 8800, it fits fine in the 8800’s holster though and it feels great in the hand.  It’s certainly not a small device, but any smaller would be too much of a compromise for me in terms of keyboard or screen.

Screen

image The screen is amazing, it’s only when you see a screen of this quality – both resolution and brightness – that you realise what a compromise you’ve been living with.  More importantly I’ve started using the bold for reading, video watching and web browsing much more than on any previous device.  Web browsing in particular is so much better, not all down to the screen of course.  I was initially surprised that RIM didn’t take the approach of cramming more information onto the screen in applications like Email and Calendar, but now I think I see their logic, the larger fonts are wonderfully crisp and I’m pleased to say that I can use the device easily without glasses, which is a luxury I haven’t had for several years.

Keyboard

Wonderful!  I was very happy with the keyboard on the 8800, but I’ve been amazed at how much better the bold is.  I have fairly small hands and this last week I’ve been suffering from Arthritis pain in them, but it’s not mattered – I’ve been tapping away faster than I thought possible.  There’s absolutely no comparison with my iPhone experience, which for me at least requires a lot of focused attention to tap out even the shortest accurate message. 

Convenience keys and trackball

I’ve found these keys to be a big differentiater compared to the iPhone.  On the iPhone I often find myself wondering whether I’ve actually pressed a soft key or whether the iPhone’s just responding slowly, pressing the home key and starting again is often required.  The physical keys on the bold are faster, more reliable and pretty consistent in terms of how applications use them, soft keys seem to give application designers perhaps too much freedom.

The trackball is the biggest area of compromise on the bold, it’s nowhere near as intuitive as the iPhone’s touch screen.  But in practice this affects only a few applications, and whilst pinch zoom demo’s well, I’ve quickly got the hang of the equally convenient shortcut keys on the bold keyboard (not always consistent across apps though).  One thing I like is that the trackball/mouse is a much more accurate way of navigating buttons and links on web pages than the finger on the iPhone.

Camera

Although the camera resolution’s not that great at 2M Pixels, it’s fine for most of my point and shoot opportunistic family snaps and wonderful for day to day photographic recording of labels, book covers, whiteboards, things I want to buy on the web when I get home from the seeing them live in the shops etc.  Although I’m missing the Camera integration with the Evernote client that the iPhone has (I love Evernote on my PCs).

Speaker

I use the speaker for listening to Podcasts and music around the house, and the Bold’s speaker is excellent, much louder and better quality than the 8800 and better than the iPhone.

Stereo A2DP Bluetooth

imageI have a tiny Jabra BT8040 Bluetooth headset that’s mono aural (ie fit’s in one ear) but it supports A2DP so I get good quality streamed music and more frequently Podcasts to it.  It’s working great so far and it also works with my TomTom GPS. 

Stereo Headset

I’m not a big fan of the supplied headset which seems a little too chunky for my ears, but I’m using my wife’s iPhone headset most of the time and that works fine.  At first I was annoyed that RIM changed from 2.5mm to 3.5mm, given the number of 2.5mm headsets I’d acquired over the years – but now I’m happy having realised that I now only need to carry a single headset for the bold, laptop and my car GPS.

Battery life

Seems less than the 8800 but then that’s no surprise.  I’ve not had an issue with running out of power yet.

Charger/Cradle

image Before the Bold even arrived I bought a couple of the cute little charger units, one for my desk and one for my bedside table.  The external charger pickups on the Bold case mean that it’s incredibly easy to drop the bold into it’s cradle, which means I do it more often.  The really big plus though is that when charging the Bold displays a great clock – very useful.  The software also supports the concept of bedside mode, which makes for a great alarm clock, which I have configured to automatically switch off all of the radios as well as wake me up to music.

Micro SD card

I have an 8GB Micro SD card crammed full of music, Podcasts and videos.  Larger cards are supported but 8GB is cost effective.  I found inserting and removing the SD card VERY difficult, eventually resorting to tweezers.

WIFI

WIFI is a nice addition to the 3G radio, with the 3G radio off, most – but not all – applications continue to work over WIFI, and downloading software’s is much faster.

Interface and built in applications

Theme

image The new theme is very nice, choosing to take a more stylised approach than the easier to identify iPhone icons, although I’m sure that an iPhone like theme will be available already for download. 

So far I’m happy with the built in Precision Silver theme, although I did quickly copy most of the applications out of folders and into the home folder.  I don’t have enough additional applications to make folders that worthwhile yet, I have kept the folders for downloads and games, although downloads that I find really useful get quickly copied to the home folder.

Applications

In the order that they appear in my home folder

Email

The new screen and the super crisp fonts make emails a joy to read (well some of them anyway) and various other minor tweaks make the whole reading experience simpler.

Calendar

A bit of a disappointment, I was hoping for a better week view that would take advantage of the new screen solution (third party products will fill the gap) but it’s fast and functional and makes good use of keyboard shortcuts for jumping around and switching views.

Browser

image The improvement in the browser is great, making it so much more usable than the 8800 was, of course the WIFI/3G helps.  It’s not quite in the same league as the iPhone browser which feels almost desktop like, but for me the Bold’s browser does the job I want it to, its fast, following links and clicking on buttons is very precise with the trackball, it seems pretty compatible with everything I’ve used it for, zooming is fairly quick and easy. 

On my desktop and laptop I rely totally on Roboform for password management, which means the only password I know is my master password.  This is a major issue for password protected web sites and I’m looking forward to a solution for automatically entering passwords into web pages.  Roboform has a Blackberry app available, but it doesn’t support auto password entry yet.

Twitterberry

I’m a massive fan of twitter – my web command line, and main social networking/communications tool.  Twitter was the first application I installed and it really takes advantage of the Bold’s screen.  The latest version of Twitterberry is great as well.

Google search

Being one click away from a Google search is just so convenient, so it’s right up there in terms of my most used applications

Sametime Connect – Instant messaging

CSC (my employer) uses Sametime for instant messaging and presence and it works superbly on the Blackberry, it’s not noticeably better on the bold.  CSC push installs Sametime into the downloads folder, I copied it to my home folder straight away.

Media Player

I reprogrammed the left hand side convenience key to start the media player, which I mainly use for Podcasts, video and music.  The media player is pretty good, massively improved for video and now seems to support the videos targeted at iPods, the video quality is excellent.  Playing Podcasts is reasonable, it doesn’t bookmark, but the media player keeps your place so long as your don’t reboot the device. 

If you browse for Podcasts in the file system you get the option to play a single file, a folder or all the files in a folder and the file browser allows you to delete Podcasts and videos that you have listened to which is very useful.

Audio quality is good, but lots of Podcasts don’t have the gain very high – ie they are quiet even at max volume, removing the safety limit on max volume helps here.

I copy media files straight from the PC to the Bold, no Blackberry Desktop Manager required.

Camera

The Camera is ok, as described above, it’s made a big difference to me and it’s made even more useful with the Flickr uploader application and through the integration with Twitter via Twitpic support in Twitterberry (lets you upload a photo and publish a link via Twitter) which is good fun.

Contacts

No real changes that I noticed, although by installing Taskify, it’s now really easy to turn an email into a task which is very useful as I do a lot of email processing on my Blackberry and also send a lot of tasks to myself as emails.

GPSed

A great application for saving GPS tracks for later sharing or personal use.  They can be uploaded to a website and linked to photo’s taken to illustrate the route.  I used this a lot on the 8800, not yet used it in anger on the Bold, but looking forward to it given the Bold’s Camera.

Google maps

Just keeps getting better and better!  Ultra useful application, I especially love the ability to search for – say - nearby Cafes and then get instructions for how to get to them from my current location, and the awesome satellite view, which has saved me from getting lost many times.

Fastforward

Autoforwards by mobile number to my home office phone whenever I plugin the USB, which I almost always do at home. 

gMail

Access to my personal gMail account

YahooMail

Access to my personal yahoo email account

Flickr uploader

Auto upload photo’s to Flickr, these photo’s can be linked to routes uploaded using GPSed

Profiles

Discovered that “press and hold” Q will switch the phone into Quiet mode, press and hold again switches back to Normal, very handy.  I also like the bedside mode.

Clock/Alarm clock

I know it’s sad but the auto display of a really nice clock, alarm clock or countdown timer when I pop the phone into it charging cradle is a small but very useful feature.

Remember the Milk

Integrates my RTM account with Blackberry Tasks, Twitter integration and Email integration is also good with RTM, so I have lots of ways to get tasks to the Blackberry and then back into Lotus Notes.

Documents to go

A massive improvement over the 8800 and I particularly like the Text only view which is easy to read and fast to navigate.  No support for viewing ink annotations though.

4 responses so far

Sep 09 2008

The inevitable switch to Firefox

Published by Steve Richards under Main

I’ve known for years that I will eventually switch to Firefox, the richness of the extensibility appeals too much to a tinkering power user like myself, but it’s taken me literally years to get comfortable enough with it to drop Maxthon as my day to day browser.

To date Maxthon has been just too slick and efficient, especially when combined with Foxit for PDF files (and I have a lot of those!!)

Anyway – last night by the pool I spent a good couple of hours learning FF3 and Acrobat and tweaking and extending it and I’m reasonably happy.  These are the addons that got me there:

  1. http://www.roboform.com/ I have hundreds of passwords and form definitions in RoboForm and it works with IE, maxthon and FF and replicates between my different PCs very easily using SugarSync.  It’s essential!!
  2. http://scholten.arno.googlepages.com/ Adds “bookmark this page” to the bookmark menu, this is a standard feature in Maxthon, browse to the folder you want to save the bookmark in and click.
  3. http://delicious.com/ I don’t use delicious (too lazy) , but this addin promises to synch up with FF.
  4. http://www.downloadhelper.net/ I do a lot of video watching offline, plus I can’t stand the stop start involved in buffering so an easy way to download video is key
  5. http://www.evernote.com/ I’m loving evernote, Maxthon had a plugin to allow easy capture of web pages or regions of pages, so does FF
  6. http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~jchien/code/ftu.html  In maxthon I could just highlight URL’s in web pages and open then by drag and drop, this is the closest FF3 compatible addon I could find, saves a lot of cut and paste, and allows you to control whether the link opens in new window, new tab or existing tab.
  7. http://flashblock.mozdev.org/  When I transferred my reading list of 30 tabs from maxthon to FF3 I found that FF was using 40% cpu, whereas Maxthon was using less than 10%.  Flash was to blame, this addon blocks all Flash from executing until you click on it – wonderful!
  8. http://www.foxmarks.com/ – Synchronises bookmarks and tags between multiple machines – I like the idea of tags!!
  9. http://foxyproxy.mozdev.org/ – One click proxy control.  I have a local proxy and work proxies and this makes switching trivial
  10. http://sessionmanager.mozdev.org/ – Not sold on this one,  Maxthon’s groups were so easy and allowed tabs to be added to existing groups and it was easy to see the content of a group and open just one page.  Session manager seems to do some of this, but so far found no way to appends a set of tabs to an existing session, or to look inside a session to see its contents.  Also I don’t like the way that a session includes all my windows by default.  I tend to have multiple task specific windows open, and I want each to be its own session.
  11. https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/380 Swifttabs, allows me to define keys to move between tabs, delete them etc.  I have left and right arrows for moving previous and next tabs and Delete for deleting a tab.  Disables the key assignments when you are in a form field.
  12. http://tmp.garyr.net/ Tabmixplus, lots of little fixes to makes things more Maxthon like, basically I like things to open in new tabs, in the background most of the time rather than replacing my current tab.  This allows me to set all of these options.
  13. http://www.oxymoronical.com/web/firefox/TabSidebar Shows this cute little sidebar (I actually have it at the bottom of the screen) with live images of the all of the tabs.  It only displays 6 tabs at a time, but its still useful for keeping track of several windows that are all updating.
  14. http://n31m4d.wordpress.com/2008/08/16/tab-url-copier-for-firefox-3/  Right click on a tab and this useful addon copies a list of all the currently open tabs into the clipboard,  I used it to generate this list :-)
  15. http://www.abstractpath.com/powermenu/  The only other thing I needed to get off maxthon was a way to keep FF in the background.  For example when I’m scanning feeds in FeedDemon I click on links that I want to read and in Maxthon they open up while maxthon is minimised,  in FF3 each time I click FF open’s up in front of FeedDemon and I need to Alt Tab FeedDemon back in front.  But by using PowerMenu I’m able to right click on the FeedDemon task bar entry and make it Always On Top,  that does the trick.

Outstanding wish list

  1. A way to force certain URL’s to open in IE but within the Firefox chome, just like Maxthon does (Maxthon is essentially a shell around IE)
  2. A different session manager, that operates at the window level, allows me to see and manipulate the content of saved sessions, and add tabs to saved sessions.

2 responses so far

Jun 16 2008

Open Source at Microsoft

Published by Steve Richards under Main

Open source has always been difficult at Microsoft, they’ve struggled with how to use its obvious value as a development and delivery model, but the SharePoint podcasting kit seems to be a great example of how to do it right. 

Although SharePoint itself is unlikely to ever be Open Source there’s great value in stimulating an Open Source culture around developing on top of the platform.  Podcasting is a good example because although SharePoint provides some good plumbing in the form of support for taking a document library of media files and surfacing this as an RSS feeds with enclosures, it didn’t have a polished solution.  The same can be said for most of the SharePoint “applications”, great platform - ok solution.  If you’re interested in Podcasting, this is definitely worth checking out, but there’s much more for SharePoint going on at Codeplex.

What Can You Do With Podcasting Kit for SharePoint (PKS)?:
  • Listen and watch audio/video podcasts, anywhere on your PC or mobile device (Zune, SmartPhone, or any podcasting device)
  • Share content by producing your own audio/video podcasts and publish them on PKS on your own.
  • Connect and engage with podcasters via your integrated instant messaging program
  • Find the most relevant content using the five star rating system, tag cloud, search engine and provide your feedback via comments.
  • Get automatic podcast updates by subscribing to RSS feeds fully compatible with Zune and other podcasting devices
    • Simple RSS feed based on a defined podcast series
    • Simple RSS feed based on a person
    • Dynamic RSS feed based on search results
  • Play podcasts in real-time using Microsoft® Silverlight™ and progressive playback
  • Retrieve instant ROI and metrics with the ability to track the number of podcasts downloaded and/or viewed, instant feedback via rating system and comments, and subscribers via the RSS feed
  • Access the richness of SharePoint to extend the solution: workflows, community sub-sites, access rights, editorial and more
  • Customize your own PKS User Experience

No responses yet

Jun 12 2008

Some useful facts and predictions driving application delivery and mobility

Published by Steve Richards under Main

I picked up a few useful bits of information during iForum this week:

  1. Citrix predict that between 30 and 50% of people will be mobile by 2010
  2. Some form of rights management is required when delivering to unmanaged PCs.  For example XenApp has a type of rights management, ie it can disable cut and paste, save to local PC disk, Print etc based on the results of a NAC check.  Microsoft have a much richer rights management solution, but its not currently integrated with NAC, nor can it be applied to all applications.  My thought perhaps SoftGrid execution environment could be NAC and rights management enabled, and therefore prevent certain things on unmanaged PCs
  3. 10% of people poled in a couple of sessions had increasing IT budgets
  4. 60% of people are expected to be working either from home or in branch offices by 2010
  5. There were 1.2B mobile phones in 2007, expected to be 1B SmartPhones by 2010
  6. 47% of companies now consider data protection now more important than perimeter security, again another hint at the potential growth of rights management if it could be made seamless enough for people who have rights!
  7. An IDC study was quoted that predicted that knowledge workers would be working with 60% of their information sourced from outside the company within 5 years.  I can really relate to this, I think I’m way beyond that ratio already and this >60% is part of my personal knowledge management system, not my companies, although some small part of it is relevant to share.

No responses yet

Jun 11 2008

Citrix Multi-media over the ICA channel

Published by Steve Richards under Main

  1. This was a very difficult session to follow, so the following notes are not that great
  2. Multi-media virtualization
    1. to any end point, over the ICA channel
  3. Apollo
    1. Streaming media
    2. 3D graphics
  4. Remote audio/video extensions, not in XenDesktop - but it is supported with the Linux Wyse thin client
    1. At some time in the future this will run on virtual machines, rather than physical machines with a GPU
  5. key to the above is:
    1. inspecting the end point
    2. inspecting the app
    3. inspecting the network
    4. then decide how to deliver the experience
  6. 3D graphics
    1. Server side GPU’s
    2. Server side rendering units
  7. Accelerated bitmap remoting
    1. directX, OpenGL, WPF, Flash and Silerlight
  8. Realtime communications
    1. VOIP over ICA seems to work ok
    2. Softphone on demand

One response so far

Jun 11 2008

iForum - Notes on RES Powerfuse

Published by Steve Richards under Main

  1. Challenges
    1. How do I ensure that users get their own personalised workspace
    2. How do I ensure that end user productivity impact is minimised during the migration
    3. How do I deal with some continued use of some local applications
    4. How do I ensure that my Virtual machines continue to be up to date
  2. This list of challenges seems to be very RES specific, perhaps that’s not surprising
  3. The workspace can be modified based on:
    1. Who you are
    2. Time of day
    3. Location
    4. Whether you have a token
  4. What is a workspace
    1. Personalisation, apps desktop, environment, portability, location sensing - with RES this is downloaded just in time
      1. Seems to require you to manually figure out what needs to be persistent between sessions.  if you have 4500 applications that’s a complex job.
    2. Security, Applications, files and folders, local disks, access to removable drives, IP connections
      1. seems to be very similar to group policy, but had the benefit of a common set of policies across operating systems.  Not sure whether it depends on the client device being domain joined, if not that would be an advantage as well
      2. more granular than GPO in some areas at least
      3. nice feature that allows a USB key to be used as a rule that can govern anything else, for example the ability to run a particular application can be linked to the presence or absence of a USB key
    3. Reliability, logon performance, session, cpu, memory, logoff
    4. Administration
      1. delegated admin, building blocks and templates, usage reporting, license metering, analysis and audit
    5. Integration
      1. Uses variety of databases
      2. Integrates with Active Directory
      3. Workspace integration between apps delivered locally and apps delivered by presentation server or xen desktop
      4. Runbook automation, using Wisdom - this seems to be a distributed systems management product - simillar to BMC Configuration manager or SCCM
        1. detects when snapshots are being used, when they are rolled back etc.  so that the cmdb maps to the actual configuration of the client, even if a snapshot rollback occurs, it will reapply lost changes.

No responses yet

Jun 11 2008

Credit Suisse - Case Study Note

Published by Steve Richards under Main

Delivered by Steve Maytum - VP - End user platforms

  1. Today
    1. 54,000 managed XP desktop, two builds.  Modified the Gina to add a “borrow” button to RDP to a CPS environment or RDP to the users desktop PC,  this is similar to what CSC have done, but my modifying the GINA they have a solution that doesn’t force a locked session to logoff - nice!
    2. 15,000 managed laptops
    3. 4,500 applications
  2. Investing in
    1. 50 unmanaged PCs
    2. 300 thin client devices
    3. 3,200 virtual workstations
    4. 700 seamless published applications, 4,500 concurrent users
    5. 70 streamed apps
    6. Lots of Blackberries
  3. Investment banking is all about agility and power and speed of delivery, 140 changes a week
  4. Private banking is about protection of data and stability, 2 big changes a year
  5. Drivers
    1. Cost reduction
    2. Strategic sourcing
    3. Increasing remote offices
    4. Mobile and nomadic users
    5. Home working
    6. Availability of power and heat, green - in some building they are not able to deliver any more power to the buildings
    7. Business continuity
    8. Regulatory requirements
    9. What their peers are doing
    10. Consumer experience & user capability is driving a need to raise the bar
    11. Increase in technology capability
  6. Remote access security framework
    1. A NAC check provides control over what you have access to, using an SSL VPN -
    2. EPA Factory is used for the end point analysis
      1. Service pack
      2. AV running and have a signature that’s less than 2 weeks old
      3. Personal firewall running
      4. New version being developed to provide information on geographical location, whether they are at the PC console or remoting to it, checking for password protected screen savers
    3. Pass
      1. Access to your PC via RDP
      2. Local printing
      3. Line of business apps
      4. Long inactivity timer
    4. Fail
      1. Just access to email and office apps, plus a softphone
      2. Short inactivity timer
    5. Citrix Access Gateway - Advanced Edition sits behind an SSL VPN
    6. RSA SecureID
    7. Citrix web interface used
    8. Most users just use Citrix to provide access to their existing desktop PCs using RDP tunnelled through ICA
    9. They have lots of users apparently who bring in their personal laptops and rdp to their desktops
  7. Success so far
    1. 8,738 user connections a day
    2. After 6PM 1.26 years of work gets done every night
    3. At the weekend 3.33 years or work gets done
    4. Total of 500 years of productivity
    5. Peak usage is 9PM and 7000 users on a sunday
    6. Number 1 requested service
  8. End state
    1. Citrix PS desktop - 112 sessions per blade
    2. VDI desktop - 40 desktops per HP C Class blade
    3. Trader private blades
    4. SoftGrid for application streaming
    5. IGEL thin clients
    6. Traditional PCs with app streaming
    7. Thin offices
    8. Remote users
    9. Considering putting all the clients on a “dirty” network and do all client - data centre access over an SSL VPN
  9. Interesting point that I’ve made myself many times
    1. yesterday - business demand outstripped technology opportunity
    2. now - technology opportunity has exploded, way beyond business demand or even businesses availability to keep up

No responses yet

Jun 11 2008

Citrix Apollo Demo

Published by Steve Richards under Main

  1. XenDesktop running Vista
  2. Client is running XPe
  3. Showed AutoCad, great 3D model rotation using 5mb/sec
  4. Vista 3D flip worked fine
  5. WPF 3D app - patient records system - worked fine
  6. Call of duty game - worked ok
  7. Full screen video worked well too
  8. Still working on high quality audio
  9. Works on Citrix desktop spec appliance

2 responses so far

Jun 11 2008

iForum - Panel Discussion

Published by Steve Richards under Main

  1. Why change Presentation Server to XenApp?
    1. The future is going to be bigger than the past
    2. Seen as a way to communicate that Citrix is relevant to the mainstream
    3. It simplifies the message
  2. What is the advantage of XenApp on XenServer?
    1. XenApp itself is not always worth virtualising, but some XenApp servers and supporting infrastructure servers will be worthwhile
    2. Now that the overhead of XenApp on XenServer is only 7% sometimes its worth virtualising because there is a benefit from everything being virtual, even if the ratio is 1 to 1
    3. Some customers would rather have a smaller number of users per server than the hardware allows, hence pushing the ratio to say 4 to 1.
  3. Why did Ian decide to develop Xen?
    1. A typical open source success story
    2. Very close working relationship with hardware vendors, shipping Xen code has features that won’t light up until hardware ships that supports it in 2009
    3. Lots of open source innovation on top of Xen and extending Xen
    4. Although Citrix say this is not Linux like, I think it is, only the hypervisor is open source, very similar to the Linux kernel.  Both projects by keeping the core deliverable limited in scope allow a lot of innovation around it
  4. Will Citrix drop Xen when HyperV comes out?
    1. Citrix will leverage Microsoft, but that’s all
    2. Think of Xen and HyperV in the same way as ICA and RDP,  my comment - this analogy works provided that HyperV lags behind Xen in capabilities
    3. Citrix definitely think they will stay ahead of Microsoft in the hypervisor space
  5. General question on integration
    1. Citrix are very keen on Powershell
    2. Workflow studio integrates well with powershell
    3. Several products are optimised to work well together, eg WanScaler for caching streamed apps and shaping ICA traffic
  6. Citrix core DNA?
    1. To be a good enterprise citizen
    2. For example snap into and integrate with other management infrastructures
    3. Good partner
    4. Pragmatic
    5. Will continue to stick to what they do best
    6. Not compete by closed lock-in strategies, Citrix will provide best integration with their own products, but will also work well with competing products
  7. Will everyone in the world be on XenDesktop tomorrow?
    1. XenDesktop is very exciting
    2. Its not for everyone
    3. XenApp is still more cost effective
    4. XenDesktop promise extends uowards to those who need a “higher definition” experience - still not clear to me what they mean by this
  8. Is there a Linux host for XenDesktop?
    1. Currently no, Citrix claim that this is based on demand, I’m surprised I would expect XenDesktop for Linux being much more cost effective than Windows
  9. What’s the roadmap to fix inter application communication with virtualization?
    1. This is a key issue, coming out in the next release “real soon now”
  10. As the OS moves to the network disk, why not put the apps on the network disk as well like Thinstall (now Thinapp)
    1. Citrix didn’t really answer the question, however my comment is that if you pre-cache the apps in the PVS image then the experience is very Thinstall like
    2. XenDesktop is still very early, Citrix are definitely looking to move to supporting physical desktops, laptops just as well as they support virtual desktops and hosted apps/desktops
  11. Will Citrix provide a different licensing model - eg monthly subscription
    1. No, it doesn’t seem to make sense since customers have already invested in the server hardware.  My comment, I’m not so sure - in the flexible datacentre the servers can be reused elsewhere, and subscription licences would allow customers to invest in Citrix only while they are competitive and switch if they stop being

No responses yet

Jun 11 2008

iForum - Five Simple Predictions

Published by Steve Richards under Main

Five simple predictions from Citrix with my comments

  1. Virtualization will be assumed, the hypervisor will just melt into the hardware, the focus will switch from cost reduction to flexibility and agility
  2. Applications will be delivered and not installed, not so sure about this one,  I think its true for a class of applications, but if you follow the citrix analogy of TV delivery, whilst its true there’s a lot of delivery going on its complemented by lots of “installed” DVD’s, YouTube video’s and cached TV on PVR’s.  I think when we say installed, we are mixing up longevity and integration with difficult to install and deinstall
  3. App experts will rule the world, i’m not so sure about this one either - often the app experts are the end users, so if this means the end users will rule the world Citrix might be right
  4. Consumerization will reshape IT, and for this reason I think we will still see things “installed” even if installation only means persistently cached.
  5. The world wide computer is real, IDC believes that within 4 years 80% of data needed to do work will be outside the firewall

No responses yet

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