Looking at desktop virtualization, but some users need 3D support. Is HP Remote Graphics a viable solution?
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Ryan Thompson
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Published on 2010-12-28T02:43:19Z
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2010/12/28
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remote-desktop
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My company is looking at desktop virtualization, and are planning to move all of the desktop compute resources into the server room or data center, and provide users with thin clients for access.
In most cases, a simple VNC or Remote Desktop solution is adequate, but some users are running visualizations that require 3D capability--something that VNC and Remote Desktop cannot support.
Rather than making an exception and providing desktop machines for these users, complicating out rollout and future operations, we are considering adding servers with GPUs, and using HP's Remote Graphics to provide access from the thin client.
The demo version appears to work acceptably, but there is a bit of a learning curve, it's not clear how well it would work for multiple simultaneous sessions, and it's not clear if it would be a good solution to apply to non-3D sessions. If possible, as with the hardware, we want to deploy a single software solution instead of a mishmash.
If anyone has had experience managing a large installation of HP Remote Graphics, I would appreciate any feedback you can provide.
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