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19 March 2010 ,
Written by Dhruv Tanwar
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Microsoft Corp. has announced that it is making new investments around desktop virtualization technologies and solutions, including virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI). The company said it plans to help organizations of all sizes increase flexibility, employee productivity and IT cost savings.
 Brad Anderson, corporate vice president of the Management and Services Division at Microsoft said that employees look for options in where and how they work, while “ IT still needs to enforce security and compliance of devices.” he says that Microsoft's desktop virtualization strategy helps address these divergent viewpoints and builds on existing investments and comprehensive management to mitigate risks and control costs, “while still equipping end users to be more productive from anywhere.”
Microsoft says customers seek desktop virtualization as a means to reduce costs and accelerate delivery of new applications. It cited its own total cost of ownership study on the use of application virtualization technology, which showed that customers using a Microsoft virtualization technology called Microsoft App-V achieved a 27 percent labor savings, and equivalent cost savings of $82 per PC per year, in application life-cycle management as compared to those not using application virtualization.
“By joining forces in desktop virtualization, Citrix and Microsoft can provide customers of all sizes with groundbreaking solutions that are profoundly simpler, richer and more cost-effective,” said Gordon Payne, senior vice president and general manager, Desktop Division, at Citrix Systems. |