Dell Touts Workstation Virtualisation Vision

Dell is to push the concept of workstations-as-a-service, by utilising the company’s Wyse desktop virtualisation technology.

It also plans to make use of its partnerships with the likes of VMware and Citrix Systems.

Workshops And Architectures

On the first day of a two-day workshop for journalists at Dell’s campuses here and in Austin, Texas, company officials on 6 March announced that the first of the company’s Dell Wyse Datacenter for Virtual Workstations reference architectures for VMware’s Horizon View and Citrix’s XenDesktop virtualisation technologies.

At the same time, the company also opened its first Workstation Virtualisation Center of Excellence, giving end users and software makers a place to evaluate workstation virtualisation and see how their applications run in such environments. Software developers also can use the new centre – which is being cosponsored by Intel and Nvidia – as a place to get their applications certified to run on virtualised workstations.

Jeff Clarke, vice chairman of operations and president of client solutions at Dell, spoke about the company’s history in workstations, a business he helped start at Dell in 1997 with the launch of the Workstation 400. According to Clark, that history includes being the first vendor to launch mobile workstations, dual-socket workstations and – in May 2013, in a move that is now helping push the workstation virtualisation approach – the first rack workstation, the Precision T7610.

“That put workstation capabilities into the data centre,” he told a group of more than three dozen journalists and analysts.

Dell executives see the PC business – including workstations – as a key part of the now-private company’s continuing efforts to expand its enterprise solutions business. In an interview with eWEEK, both Clark and Pat Kannar, product marketing director for Dell’s Precision workstation business, said the client systems are still the vendor’s best avenue for gaining new customers, and that workstations – after several quarters of flat growth or declines in the market – are now seeing sales grow. At the same time, Dell, which has put a new emphasis on workstations over the past couple of years, is gaining share in the space, which Kannar said is worth more than $6 billion (£3.6bn).

Dell competes with Hewlett-Packard and Lenovo, among others, in the workstation market. Clark and other executives said that the key differentiators for Dell are the software the vendor offers – such as Reliable Memory Technology for improved uptime, Dell Precision Performance Optimizer for greater application performance, and CAS-W for caching – and the close work it’s doing with ISVs and other partners.

Workstation Solution

In a post on the company blog last year, CEO Michael Dell said the workstation represented the onset of the company’s efforts around offering customers solutions rather than simply selling them hardware.

“It was the first product line we designed for a specific customer segment, with their unique requirements, obstacles and goals in mind,” Dell wrote. “We even partnered with independent software vendors (ISVs) to ensure our workstations were not only compatible but optimised for the critical applications these customers require. … These machines are workhorses engineered specifically for some of our most compute-intensive customers – engineers, software developers, video editors, animators and architects, to name a few.”

Dell officials said that organizations at times will try to run these compute-intensive applications on less expensive high-end PCs. However, Andy Rhodes, executive director of Dell’s Precision unit, said the workstations offer technologies that the PC’s can’t, such as Intel’s Xeon server chips and better graphics features. In addition, Kannar said the company is continuing to make strides in closing the price gap between high-end OptiPlex desktops and Precision workstations.

The virtual workstations will be another way for customers to access capabilities of the system, while meeting what Rhodes said were some of the key trends in enterprise environments. That includes security, given the rise of the increasingly mobile employee and the rise of bring-your-own-device (BYOD) policies. Having the data stored in the data centre and able to be accessed remotely reduces the risks inherent in having the data spread around the world in users’ systems, he said.

In addition, it can add to the drive for greater collaboration among employees, according to Rhodes. It also means that anyone can access the data from any devices, such as tablets, PCs, other workstations or thin and zero clients from Dell’s Wyse business.

“The days of one person being able to finish one project are done,” he said. “You [now] have multiple people collaboration all the time.”

It also improves the workflow for businesses, enabling them to speed up the creation of content by being able to leverage other virtualised workstations.

The virtualised workstation reference architectures can be deployed either using Precision R7610 rack workstations housed in the data centre or PowerEdge R720 rack servers. Both the workstations and servers run on Intel’s Xeon E5 v2 chips – which can hold up to 12 cores – and Nvidia’s Grid K1 or K2 graphics cards. Organisations can also use solid-state disks (SSDs) to further improve response times.

The first of the reference architectures also will be optimised for applications from such vendors as Siemens, AutoDesk and SolidWorks.

During the event, several Dell customers spoke about how they were using the vendor’s workstations and other technologies. Richard Sparkman, IT director for carmaker Shelby American, said his company has been using Dell workstations in 1999 and is an all-Dell shop. The products have helped reduce the time it takes for Shelby to create designs.

“Our product development for cars has gone from years to months to weeks and even to days, in certain cases,” he said.

Do you know the history of Dell? Take our quiz!

Originally published on eWeek.

Jeffrey Burt

Jeffrey Burt is a senior editor for eWEEK and contributor to TechWeekEurope

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