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Solution providers and vendors met up at this year's XChange Government Integrator '08 conference in Washington, D.C. this year to honor the companies that prove that they understand the IT requirements of the public sector.
ChannelWeb picked 15 common beliefs about Microsoft and gave channel partners the opportunity to explain why they're more fiction than fact.
As part of the franchiser's ConnectedOffice remote management service, the first iteration of the virtualized desktop environment will place VMware virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) inside the firewall at a client site, according to The Utility Company President Mark Scott. Around mid-2008, the company will release a version of ConnectedOffice that hosts the VDI at The Utility Company's own service center.
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The Utility Company |
"The MSP vendor's business is built on the complexity of the infrastructure. The whole MSP vendor ecosystem is built on that end-client infrastructure being complex. You require all this remote backup and storage, end-user hardware, etc. When you go virtual, that goes away," Scott said.
"For most MSPs, their motivation is to load people up on hardware, systems, VoIP, etc., so they can load the management service on top of that. The SMBs aren't benefiting. They're still spending unprecedented amounts of money on IT, to the point where most SMBs are overspending on underutilized technology."
Scott Jackson, director of services at The Utility Company, said that virtualization is the key to getting more life out of existing hardware at customer sites.
"On the desktop side, a lot of what we're talking about is life-cycle management. We can still leverage [a customer's] current PCs, but provide them with a virtual interface instead of upgrading their hardware. As you add new users and new equipment, we can offset a lot of that cost with thin client tech," Jackson said.
Scott claims The Utility Company will be able to extend the life cycle of the average PC from three years to seven years with its virtualization service.
Virtualization is as hot a technology as there is, but sources in the greater MSP community have their doubts about how quickly businesses will adopt virtualized desktop environments.
Mike Backers, CEO of Cincinnati-based MSP Altoria Solutions, questioned whether savings will be all that great for companies buying into the virtualization craze.
"With the constant drop in prices for PCs and laptops, it's not clear if the savings will be that great. And people still like the Microsoft model, where you buy the CD and load software. People also like to be unconnected sometimes," he said.
Still, virtualization at the cubicle level is coming, Backers said. It's just difficult to determine how many SMB crumbs the giants of the Web app world like Google and Salesforce.com will leave.
"I could easily see it coming to fruition, particularly with Google Apps. ... And the main issue will be privacy concerns. But just from a conceptual perspective, if Google succeeds at making hosted business applications mainstream, it could open up some possibilities for MSPs," Backers said.
MSPAlliance President Charles Weaver reported that members of his association who have recently built virtualized desktop services didn't necessarily do so to beat the competition on hardware costs. Rather, the two small MSP shops he cited who built locked-down dummy machines, did it to minimize trouble tickets and help-desk calls.
If virtualization turns out to be the aspirin for those twin headaches of the managed services world, maybe The Utility Company's model will catch on faster with MSPs than some might think.