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What desktop virtualisation really means

posted onMay 31, 2010
by hitbsecnews

Desktop virtualisation harks back to the good old mainframe days of centralised computing while upholding the fine desktop tradition of user empowerment. Each user retains his or her own instance of desktop operating system and applications, but that stack runs in a virtual machine on a server -- which users can access through a low-cost thin client similar to an old-fashioned terminal.

The argument in favor of desktop virtualisation is powerful: What burns through more hands-on resources or incurs more risk than desktop computers? Even with remote desktop management, admins must invade cubicles and shoo away employees when it's time to upgrade or troubleshoot. And each desktop or laptop provides a fat target for hackers and an opportunity to steal data.

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