Rick,
How come I am not surprised that you have a daughter that does that!!?!
Good point, I was thinking in the context of a recent college project we did where VDI was sufficient for such applications because they were simply doing basic learning labs. If you are doing extensive rendering type of workloads then I agree that you probably need dedicated workstations with capable resources in CPU, MEM and graphics.
Although don’t forget that a typical VDI server is (4) Quad core CPU’s so there are plenty of light and med workloads that work pretty well too!!
Steve Greenberg
Thin Client Computing
34522 N.
(602) 432-8649
From: thin-bounce@freelists.org [mailto:thin-bounce@freelists.org] On Behalf Of Rick Mack
Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2009 4:59 PM
To:
Subject: [THIN] Re: thin client deployment in a school
Hi Steve,
My daughter runs Maya at home and her quad core AMD with a high end graphics card has to work pretty hard to do some of the rendering. 3D Max isn't any better so I'd have to say that neither of them belong on a shared environment, TS or VDI. That automatically makes a case for either using fat clients and something like PVS, or PC blades and 3D graphics display-capable protocol/thin clients. In the latter case you're looking at RGS or PCoIP with PVS possibly being used for the PC blade provisioning.
If thin clients are the logical choice to keep the expensive hardware away from students, you don't have a lot of options.
Some of the other stuff will most certainly run on VDI or TS but I'd probably opt for VDI so you could stick to just managing a single environment (workstations/thin client) on the keep it simple principle.
regards,
Rick
--
Ulrich Mack
Quest Software
Provision Networks Division
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 8:55 AM, Steve Greenberg <steveg@thinclient.net> wrote:
I agree with the idea that for intensive appliations such as Maya and AutoCad that a mix of TS and VDI is a very strong solution. Use the TS for general applications to gain the efficiency of the shared servers and use VDI for apps that require more resources and/or have compatibility/support issues.
I also like Provision Server to PC hardware because you get the best of both worlds-local graphics performance and compatibility with centralized mamangment.
In *some* cases I think Provisioning Server to PC is a better thin client!!
Steve Greenberg
Thin Client Computing
34522 N.
(602) 432-8649
No comments:
Post a Comment