Wyse Technology has expanded its support
for desktop virtualisation in its terminals, adding support for
VMware's desktop broker and enabling
workers to use USB peripherals. The firm also added to its laptop thin client
line-up with new large screen models.
Wyse announced at VMworld
Europe that all of its thin client models based on XP Embedded and those
using its proprietary Thin OS now have embedded support for VMware's Virtual
Desktop Manager (VDM).
The move means that Wyse terminals will work straight out of the box with
virtual desktop infrastructure based on VMware's tools, the firm said.
"You just take it out of the box, plug it into the LAN and away you go,"
said Wyse chief marketing officer Jeff McNaught.
Also at the VMware show, Wyse unveiled its TCX USB Virtualiser software that
lets users of virtual desktops connect USB peripherals such as Flash drives and
printers, just as most users do on a standalone PC.
The tool, which supports VMware and Citrix XenDesktop virtual desktop
environments, enables all the USB ports of a Wyse thin client to appear as if
they are on the server, according to McNaught.
"Users want to add business card scanners and other USB devices, and our
product virtualises this back to the server," he said. Administrators can
whitelist which devices users are allowed to connect, he added.
Wyse said it is also working to add the same support for workers using
traditional Citrix or terminal Services sessions.
"This is one of the last inhibitors to thin clients being used by knowledge
workers, and it's going to be a very big move in virtualisation," McNaught said.
Wyse also launched new thin client laptops, the X90L and X90Le, both of which
have a 15.4in widescreen display and build upon the success of the earlier X90
models with a 12.1in screen.
The X90L has 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi support, while the X90Le additionally has
Bluetooth to enable it to use a mobile phone to connect back to a server host.
"These are designed to meets different needs, and are more of a desktop
replacement model," said McNaught. However, he said that the laptop models are
one of the fastest growing product lines it sells.
"We’re seeing customers that would traditionally have put thin clients only
on a desk are now giving them to workers that move around the campus and work
from home," he said, adding, "we're seeing mobile thin computing really take
off."
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