It began so innocently. While installing a new ESXi server and checking on a
few racks of gear in a remote office, the office manager asked me politely if I
could set up a workstation for the new intern. I haven't set up a workstation in
many, many moons, but as "the IT guy," I was the obvious candidate. I smiled and
said, "No problem."
After 45 minutes, two "perfectly good, just imaged" workstations, a bad patch
cable, a Windows Active Directory computer object/SID overlap, and a slight
headache from bumping my head on the desk, the XP workstation was finally up and
on the network -- with the intern standing behind me the whole time. "Annoyed"
is far too simple a term to accurately convey my mood.
[ InfoWorld's Randall C. Kennedy argues that VMware has lost its mojo. | VDI is
missing five key attributes, as Paul Venezia outlines. | InfoWorld Test Center
reviews: Citrix XenDesktop, Microsoft Hyper-V, and VMware VI3. ]
VDI would be perfect, except ...
Even more annoying and ironic, there was a perfectly good VDI pilot project
running at the main datacenter. Well, "perfectly good," as in it's as good as
VDI can get for the moment. Unfortunately, VDI is caught in a perfect storm of
bad news.
One might think that the economy would be good for VDI. After all, it's supposed
to save money, right? Well, yeah: over the course of a few years, following the
initial purchase and implementation costs. But now really isn't the best time
for many companies to be spending loads of dough on a new and relatively
unproven desktop delivery mechanism. And yes, it will eventually save money, but
you need to leverage what you currently have. Spending $300 or so on a thin
client for every user will raise some eyebrows when you can get full-on desktop
systems for the same money, without the expensive back-end infrastructure.
Also, VDI promises to save time and effort -- as long as your users don't need
to use any form of multimedia or Flash-based applications. While many vendors
have introduced relatively solid sideband video delivery tools to evade the
nastiness that is video over RDP, these tools generally cost more, as do the
thin clients that can use them.