How do YOU demo VDI?
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I'm on to other things now. This one seemingly simple and casual question has resulted in a rise in blood pressure and anxiety that I find completely unnecessary and unproductive.
I have found no helpful or beneficial responses so far here. Only argumentative replies suggesting I have already pigeon-holed my demo tactic and that I chose wrong.
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@JasGot said in How do YOU demo VDI?:
I'm on to other things now. This one seemingly simple and casual question has resulted in a rise in blood pressure and anxiety that I find completely unnecessary and unproductive.
I have found no helpful or beneficial responses so far here. Only argumentative replies suggesting I have already pigeon-holed my demo tactic and that I chose wrong.
While you may have explained what you are looking for incorrectly that is for sure. If you wanted VDI solutions, VMWare has one, Citrix XenServer another.
So I believe I'm on the most accurate topic in that you want to be able to demo a VDI solution, and need to know what to recommend.
Rather than how can you demo VDI.
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@JasGot said in How do YOU demo VDI?:
I'm on to other things now. This one seemingly simple and casual question has resulted in a rise in blood pressure and anxiety that I find completely unnecessary and unproductive.
I have found no helpful or beneficial responses so far here. Only argumentative replies suggesting I have already pigeon-holed my demo tactic and that I chose wrong.
Who is arguing? We are just clarifying what you are asking for. No one argued, just pointed out ways to demo that would be really simple. It was all an attempt to answer exactly what we thought you were asking.
None of it was disagreeing with something that you had said.
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@JasGot said in How do YOU demo VDI?:
Only argumentative replies suggesting I have already pigeon-holed my demo tactic and that I chose wrong.
I think you must have not understood what we posted, because I don't think any of us said that. It would have not made sense for us to have done that, since I don't think any of us, even now, are completely sure what you were asking or trying to do. We aren't up to the point of arguing or anything like that. Just trying to clarify what it is you are looking to find out, and pointing out ways that we think would best solve the problem you are facing.
(Other than showing that Amazon offers RDP for WorkSpaces, of course.)
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VDI is Virtual Desktop Infrastructure. You run a desktop environment for a set of users on a hypervisor in your server room or COLO.
The user launches a piece of software on a desktop, laptop or chromebook or even an app from their iPad and is connected to a virtual environment that has the user login with a set of credentials.
From there they have all of the tools to do their job, printers, email, scanners etc etc.
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Make sure you choose the right storage method for VDI if you are doing this yourself, otherwise you will have a right shit storm. You will save money and resources if you can use session based desktops rather than VDI based. there are only specific cases when you need VDI desktops I find. If you have session based desktops you can also have 2 sessions hosts and if you spec them properly you can put one in maintenance mode for updates, software installs etc and shift everyone else on to the other server temporary.
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@JasGot said in How do YOU demo VDI?:
Cloud based VM on slow ASYNC cable ISP connection for large file usage when the file is in house
That's just stupid. If you move to hosted VDI, you move your files to it. NORMALLY you deploy VDI to the gravity well of where the data or latency sensitive application is.
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@JasGot said in How do YOU demo VDI?:
@scottalanmiller The customer MUST see their local printer, Electronic Signature Device, Meter Reader Scanner, Barcode Scanner, and a sundry of other business specific peripherals, Software and workflows function correctly before they agree to anything. The demo need to function for a time of up to a few weeks.
I'm not looking to argue about ANY aspect of VDI, just curious how others are doing it.
I used to work for a VMware partner. We maintained our own in-house environment that we could do PoC's off of. For the list you are describing you would have either a Horizon View, or a Citrix environment you can demo off of or a hosted environment that can demo some things. VMware has the "TestDrive" program that lets you use a hosted environment to test things. You would talk to the VMware or Citrix SE's to help use their solutions if you don't have one.
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@JasGot said in How do YOU demo VDI?:
@DustinB3403 Maybe we should get back to the base question, since I already know how VDI works. I'll rephrase the question. When you walk in the door to demo VDI, what do you have with you?
My laptop, my phone, or my iPad. These days I show them WorkspaceOne (a SSO broker) as it honestly solves more remote access problems than VDI.
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@JasGot said in How do YOU demo VDI?:
If I had a nickle for every customer that "...knows what VDI looks like and how it acts, hard to find anyone that doesn't use it or something that looks identical regularly." I could buy a single piece of nickle candy.
Not in the real world: "Showing off a physical thin client hardware device is kind of pointless as you can describe it perfectly... it's exactly like a normal computer running the thin client software, but with a smaller computer that costs "less" (often they cost more.)"Assuming the demo can be done over an H5 client with H.264 I would have them login from their machine..
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@DustinB3403 said in How do YOU demo VDI?:
VDI is Virtual Desktop Infrastructure. You run a desktop environment for a set of users on a hypervisor in your server room or COLO.
or public cloud. Citrix, VMware can both run from AWS, Azure, IBM Cloud etc.
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An updated topic will/should be coming with some clarifying points.
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