Glen,

Here is a company that creates thin clients which may be worth taking a look 
at.  http://www.panologic.com/ .  This is one of our portfolio companies and it 
has made some good strides in the past year.  I haven't used them yet but may 
try demo'ing them in the office.  I believe they currently only suppport vmware 
on the backend.  

Regards,


David




________________________________
From: Glen Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: NT System Admin Issues <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 8:51:05 AM
Subject: RE: Thin clients


Joe.
We are looking at true thin client but at stage, we don’t really know what we 
are doing.
We have hoped to save some money over the long haul but we are pretty sure we 
wont save any $$ the first year or so.
We don’t have any thin clients or back end so I was hoping someone would have 
recommendations or reading info on which way to go with the back end as well as 
the clients.
I’ve seen previous comments about Wyse and remember they was mostly positive.  
We’ve also seen a lab set up with a Dell server and 50 HP thin clients.  
Unfortunately, we didn’t get to play with it so we didn’t really get a feel for 
the back end.  The client experience we pretty positive though. 
I also I’ve heard about this.  Wonder if it is something to consider or avoid.  
The price looks good but I’m looking for others advice.
 
King of Prussia, PA, September 12, 2008– Devon IT, Inc., an alternative desktop 
solution company and the fastest growing provider of thin client terminals, 
today announced it will debut its ultra-small TC2 thin client at VMworld 2008 
(booth 360) at The Venetian Hotel in Las Vegas from September 15-18. 

Starting at US$189, the TC2 is VDI, Xen, and RDP-capable and designed to be the 
most efficient and cost-effective alternative to standard PCs. Standing less 
than six inches in height and five inches in length, the TC2 is the market’s 
smallest generally available thin client. It consumes 8-9 watts on average, 
compared to nearly 150 watts used by PCs, and is VESA-mountable to maximize 
desktop space.
 
From:Joe Heaton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 11:37 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Thin clients
 
Wyse makes great thin clients, but most of the manufacturers are getting in the 
game now.  Other things to consider are:
 
1)       Are you going true thin clients, and pushing the desktop to the 
device, or going more of a mid-client, and pushing specific apps.
2)      Do you already have Citrix, or some other app to do the pushing?
3)      What exactly are you trying to accomplish with the thin clients?  Is 
there another way of doing it without going thin clients?
 
If you’re going for cost savings, you’re not really going to see much.  The 
typical thin client is about what you can get a decent business desktop.  You 
may save a few bucks per machine, but if you don’t already have the backend 
stuff, then you won’t see a real cost savings, at least not right off.
 
Joe Heaton
Employment Training Panel
 
From:Glen Johnson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 8:27 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Thin clients
 
We have been asked to investigate using thin clients for some stations.  
Initially, maybe 10 or so but if it goes well, who knows, maybe 100 or more.
Any reading or other resources that anyone care to point me to?
Also, any suggestions as to what vendors/technology to look at and to avoid.
Thanks.
Glen.


      
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