Virtualization To Put Consumer Tech In The Workplace

Dec 30, 2008 3:12 PM


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Virtualization promises to usher in a new era of consumer technology in the workplace—potentially satisfying the demands of new workers from the Facebook generation who want to use more consumer hardware for work purposes.

According to ZDNet News, companies are expected to increasingly roll out technology to implement “sandboxed” virtual machines on staff's personal laptops and mobile devices, allowing workers to choose the hardware they use to do their job, while keeping corporate data safe.

Such virtual machines can give staff access to their business applications and information, including the security protocols and software of the corporate system, and are completely isolated from the user's physical machine.

The shift may help businesses cater to “millenials” who a want to use their own technology—including iPhones and instant messaging—at work, according to a recent survey.

Clive Longbottom, service director for business-processes facilitation at analyst house Quocirca, told ZDNet that both VMware, with VMware View, and Citrix, with its ICA application-server-system protocol, will be focusing on the technologies in 2009. "With the collapse in laptop prices and more people wanting to use their own machines, there will be a massive push towards this use of virtual desktops next year," Longbottom said.

"The virtual desktop is completely sandboxed from the physical machine to the extent that you cannot even cut and paste between the two," Longbottom said.

Guy Bunker, chief scientist at Symantec, said the security company is also developing virtualization technology to allow consumer technology to be used at work.

"We are looking at a way of taking the virtualization of the end point and allowing workers to download a corporate virtual machine. Within that, you will have the corporate security stack and applications, but it will be completely isolated and sandboxed," said Bunker.

"You will see this happening on laptops first before spreading to other devices," he said.

Bunker said that such technology can also help consolidate software licensing costs by allowing the virtual machine to run applications held centrally, rather than on each user's device.

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© 2012 Penton Media Inc.

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