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VMware Will Virtualize Google Chrome, But Will Chrome Run VMware For VDI?

There was a lot of excitement when Google announced it’s intent to develop the Chrome operating system (Chrome OS). Almost immediately journalists, analysts, and bloggers began speculating if Google’s future OS offering could pose a threat to Microsoft’s dominance on the desktop. VMware quickly added clout to Google’s plans by promising to support Google OS. VMware also expressed interest in the Chrome OS being used to develop specialized applications as virtual appliances. However, the most compelling question and use for the new Linux based OS to me would be if the Chrome OS could become relevant in connecting to VDI solutions. I feel that Google’s immediate traction and ultimate success with an OS relies on it’s ability to install VDI clients – not as a Microsoft desktop replacement, whether physical or virtual.

VDI has gained momentum. VMware, Citrix, and Microsoft all boast about the availability of an enterprise ready virtual desktop management solution. Storage technologies such as thin provisioning, deduplication, and rapid cloning are being perfected and optimized and will lower the total cost of ownership for VDI. 64 bit Hardware with virtualization assist technologies on host servers has enabled record setting ratios of supported users. It seems that OS licensing models formerly based on physical hardware are slowly morphing to support virtualized environments. But, in my opinion, there is still a major hurdle to the enterprise’s wide spread acceptance of VDI on a platform other than Windows.

Is enterprise business really ready to migrate the majority of their user applications and data to Linux, the web, or even the Cloud? For Chrome OS to challenge Microsoft for seats in the enterprise

this shift will have to happen, and it will have to be publicly reported as highly successfully and common. Are web based applications and software as a service (Saas) alternatives ready to handle main stream business services like email and office collaboration? More importantly, are enterprise IT departments ready to allow cloud providers to run, protect, and store their business critical applications and data? When that happens the OS on the desktop becomes less important. The browser will become the only application of importance.

Until then, Windows will continue to be the most popular desktop OS simply because it runs the most popular applications needed by business today. Therefore, the typical VDI solution in the immediate future will continue to consist of Windows VMs. Microsoft’s decision to strip down the bloat and replace Vista with Windows 7 was a wise move, and probably has ensured Microsoft’s position as the desktop market leader for many more years to come.

That’s why it more important to think about what will the users use to connect to those virtual desktops. Yes, VMware, and the competition, is developing their own desktop hypervisor OS. VMware calls their work in progress CVP (Client Virtualization Platform), but is VMware’s CVP (for example) really going to be able to run on all modern notebooks and desktops? To be specific, on the Lenovo T400 I am using to write this, will a VMware client hypervisor allow all of the volume buttons, wifi adapter controls, microphone, blue tooth, and other miscellaneous hardware features to work properly? What about all the other manufacturers of notebooks, netbooks, and desktops with their different models and hardware configurations too? This is where all the work put in to a modern Linux distribution appears to have the advantage. Otherwise, does the future client hypervisors requiring their own specialized hardware really sound appealing? Does expecting users to use today’s notebooks without the full functionality sound realistic?

Assuming Google’s product will be most like a Linux distribution, it seems to me that Google’s best bet for mass adoption of the Chrome OS would be to make sure that enterprises can count on installing VMware’s View Client (and the competition’s VDI clients as well). The real corporate desktop will still have to be a Windows virtual machine that can be synced between the data center and the client OS and even used offline. Eventually, as cloud based application replacements emerge in the future, Google’s OS could become more of a direct competitor/replacement to Microsoft’s OS.

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  • jcurtin1960

    Virtual Bridges and IBM already support VDI access (Windows or Linux guests) from Linux clients and will support access from Chrome as well.

    Linux desktops are a great choice for lowering cost and the do NOT preclude running virtual Windows desktop sessions in VDI mode. Of course, Virtual Bridges and IBM are the only one's currently offering the ability to run a virtual Linux desktop as well. So, with a virtual Linux desktop running on an existing Windows or Linux client organizations have the flexibility of tailoring their software expenditure to their organizational needs, while dramatically lowering the operational costs of managing desktops – Windows or Linux.

    And, the VERDE solution from Virtual Bridges has the added advantage of combining a client-side hypervisor, for disconnected use, as part of the same VDI package.

    Check out the press release here: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/07/prweb2691

  • jcurtin1960

    Virtual Bridges and IBM already offer VDI access from Linux clients (and are the only VDI vendor to offer access to both Linux or Windows guest VDI sessions from the same infrastructure) and will also support Chrome.

    Deploying Linux desktops in an organization is a great way for organizations to lower the cost of software – and this approach does NOT preclude users from accessing Windows VDI sessions from Linux desktops. Organizations who are interested in aggressively reducing cost, without compromising productivity or quality of experience, can run a combination of Linux or Windows virtual desktops thus further reducing the cost of managing these desktops.

    IBM and Virtual Bridges offer the only VDI solution that gives organizations the flexibility of serving Windows or Linux Virtual Desktops from the same infrastructure.

    The solution is also the only offering on the market today to offer one solution that manages both VDI sessions and “managed desktops” or client-side hypervisors (for users who are mobile and may not always be connected to the network).

    To learn more please see the announcement here: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/07/prweb2691

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  • http://www.vladan.fr Vladan

    Chrome Browser rocks. That's for sure. Simple, fast, reliable. It's been fast adopted in the place where I work, because of the fast speed of the browser. I'm looking forward to see the Google OS in action.

    There is also a question TS too. The OS should have the latest TS client pre-installed for TS connections. There is still more clients usint TS than VDI (at least where I live). -:)

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  • http://seanclark.us vseanclark

    I would love to see a Chrome takeover of the desktop. Between Chrome and Ubuntu, companies have some very compelling options for a solid linux desktop. But we still need the apps to come along. Google's muscle will be helpful here and help give a little more weight behind the prospect of a linux desktop in the enterprise.

  • http://vmetc.com rbrambley

    jcurtin,

    Thanks for the info on Virtual Bridges. I was not aware of this Linux client alternative

  • http://vmetc.com rbrambley

    vSean,

    Google's “muscle” is definitely the key. Millions are already using web based GMail, Docs, & Google Apps, and with Gears providing offline and other additional functionality per app it makes for a perfect Linux distro for the user desktop. Less admin and support needed on the client OS with more functionality. Just add a VDI client for the corporate desktop!

    Like you, I would be happy with either Ubuntu or Chrome OS (if it lives up to the hype!)

  • Name

    Impatience to wait for Chrome OS ?
    Take a look at this video (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mv32N3oTsGQ).
    You can download the Live CD, run it in a Virtual Machine and you can even network boot it.
    Visit http://sites.google.com/a/codtech.com/cult/cult… for details.

  • Name

    Impatience to wait for Chrome OS ?
    Take a look at this video (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mv32N3oTsGQ).
    You can download the Live CD, run it in a Virtual Machine and you can even network boot it.
    Visit http://sites.google.com/a/codtech.com/cult/cult… for details.

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