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Technology
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Cost of Ownership |
Thin Client |
Thin Computing |
Network Computing |
Server Based |
RDP | Zero
Client
Thin
Client, Server Based Computing, Network Computing
Network
Computing
The
term network
computing denotes computers working together over
a network,
as opposed to independently operating computing. It
later came to have a specific technical meaning, denoting
a graphical form of remote
computing. It retains its more general meaning,
however, in commercial IT circles.
As
computer
networking protocols became part of increasing
numbers of commercial systems in the 1980's, the term
"network
computing" became increasing redundant. By
the late 1980's, companies such as Sun Microsystems
had marketing campaigns that announced "the network
is the computer".
By
this time, stand-alone workstations & personal
computers had come to dominate the computing landscape.
They were inter-connected, but they were increasing
decentralized, unlike time-sharing
systems. As machines became more commodified,
they began to fail more often. The notion emerged
of centralized time-sharing, over a very wide area
network,
as a way of retaining one's "computing identity".
Larry
Ellison of Oracle Corporation and Scott McNealy of
Sun Microsystems began to talk of a "dream of
network
computing", where thin
clients were replaceable, but personal information
& computing activity was retained on central
computers. The technology for this already existed
at the time, in text based computing in the form of
remote-login, and in the GUI form of the X11 windowing
system, which allowed a workstation
to act as a thin
client to a remote machine. But Oracle & Sun
were targeting corporations that had become very PC
dependent.
With
the advent of the World Wide Web, any server
became a centralized data repository, and any browser
could turn a computer into a thin
client. Web services, for example Webmail services
such as Hotmail, reduced the personal information
kept on a client
machine, and allowed people more mobility and personal
information security.
In
a sense, web browsers and web services made network
computing for the masses. But it wasn't a full
computing experience, of the sort normally provided
by Personal computers, and of the kind which network
computing had promised. In 1999, an AT&T/Olivetti
laboratory released screen mirroring software that
worked in a web browser, and they dubbed this Virtual
network
computing (VNC), to distinguish it from commercial
network
computing requiring special thin
client hardware. Within months of VNC's release,
network
computing for the masses finally became available
as a web service: a small start-up called Workspot
provided VNC connection to Linux-based desktops.
Thin
Computing
Thin
computing delivers the access your people need,
at a much lower cost than traditional methods, all
without compromising your security or manageability.
Thin
Computing makes it easier for IT to manage systems
and improve the reliability and security of information,
we offer them all Contact
us!!!
Thin
Client
Thin
client hardware device which depends primarily
on the central
server for processing activities.
Server
Based Computing
Server
based computing [SBC] model is where applications
are deployed, managed, supported and executed from
central
server farms. Screen, keyboard and mouse information
is exchanged between the client
and the server
farms. No applications actually reside and execute
on the desktop client-server
based computing delivers instant access to business-critical
applications and data at this central point
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| Applica
U2Lite
Applica
U2Lite locally supports an additional station
attached to the Host PC with USB Keyboard and
USB Mouse support. Independent audio can be
added with the Applica USB Sound Adapter. Applica
U2Lite is the least expensive solution for
local station support such as kiosks and home
use. |
ApplicaDS
ApplicaDS
is combination of hardware and software that
allows many users to use one Windows PC simultaneously
and independently! All users have their own
Windows desktop and can work completely independent
- with no perceptible performance degradation. |
Applica
UGroup
Applica
UGroup allows the addition of 4 extra remote
users to the primary user's computer by connecting
an additional set of standard keyboard, mouse
and monitor as well as other devices using USB
technology. |
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