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IGEL Introduces Digital Services Virtualisation

IGEL Technology has introduced Digital Services Virtualisation (DSV), a new technological paradigm that promises to revolutionise thin clients. DSV eliminates any of the final issues associated with a user needing a thin client to access virtual PCs running traditionally difficult server-based applications such as multi-media, DirectX graphics or robotic control. DSV delivers a true PC-like experience with all the added security and manageability benefits of a thin client.

Traditionally, thin client users had three choices for delivering applications. The Citrix ICA or Microsoft RDP protocols could deliver a Windows application but struggled to deliver multi-media content or applications that directly accessed client hardware. To counter this, multi-media redirection was introduced that streamed certain multi-media files outside ICA/RDP to the thin client, but it could not handle the popular Flash protocol or deliver applications needing direct hardware access. The final choice was that users could run multiple digital services on a thin client concurrently (like a web browser or ICA) and then toggle between them using the proprietary interface of the terminal. All of these methods compromised the Windows PC experience.

IGEL Universal Desktops, powered by Microsoft Windows XP Embedded, are the first in the market to include DSV as standard by incorporating a RES PowerFuse Workspace Extender client so that local digital services can be "reverse-published" to a virtual PC. Using DSV, when certain digital services are activated on the virtual desktop, the application call is "trapped" using RES PowerFuse, and a request is sent to the IGEL Universal Desktop. The digital service then opens locally, integrated with the virtual PC desktop. It is completely seamless to the end-user so that they cannot see where the web browser, media player or other digital services are running.

This approach offers an outstanding user experience with its standard Microsoft Windows PC desktop look and feel, all local digital services controlled from the virtual desktop and no need to "toggle" between digital service sessions. Local digital services can communicate directly via the native protocol designed for the application without having the bottleneck of streaming everything down the ICA or RDP protocol.

Using IGEL DSV, the Universal Desktop can also deliver the "toughest" server-based applications including all multi-media types, VoIP, video conferencing, local device control such as CCTV and industrial automation, and Embedded DirectX local applications on Windows XP Embedded.

Finally, users receive all these benefits along with the traditional advantages of thin clients, such as bullet-proof security, virus immunity, no local data and sophisticated systems management using the bundled IGEL Remote Management Suite software.

The DSV update for IGEL Windows XP Embedded firmware is available here.



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