[THIN] Re: thin client deployment in a school

  • From: "Jim Kenzig http://thin.ms" <jkenzig@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Wed, 11 Mar 2009 08:01:29 -0400

I agree in this case Citrix Provisioning Server may be the way to
go because you can stream an entire OS down to the workstation.  There are
many schools currently doing this. However a thin client is not the best
choice for PVS unless it has enough HD storage space for whatever OS you are
sending to it.

Jim Kenzig
Blog: http://www.techblink.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/kenzig
Twitter: http://twitter.com/InternetPilot




On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 7:17 AM, Rick Mack <ulrich.mack@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Hi Puneet,
>
> I'm the greatest fan of terminal services around and I've done lots of
> successful school terminal server rollouts. I've even got our developers to
> produce freeware utilities so you can run stuff like AutoCAD multi-user on
> terminal services.
>
> But 150 students isn't a lot of students and stuff like Maya, 3D Max etc is
> going to need some really hefty compute power (read GPUs) for rendering that
> you're not going to get in a shared environment, either terminal services or
> VDI. By all means use thin clients and put the compute power back in the
> computer room but don't even think about doing this stuff on either a pure
> terminals ervices or VDI solution unless you like pain.
>
> Worst case I'd be tempted to go for a mix of VDI and PC blades and since
> the apps aren't OpenGL you're going to have to seriously consider using
> something like HP's RGS protocol which can deliver 3D applications,
> multimedia etc. I'd use HP's T5730 thin clients provided you can get a good
> price and you'll have a brilliant 3D application delivery system. The only
> gotcha with RGS is that the video resolution and colour depth are limited to
> the maximum console video capabilities. That means VMware is out (1180x885)
> for VDI and you're left with something like Hyper-V (1600x1200) or maybe
> some other Xen-based hypervisor to get decent screen resolution.
>
> Of course if we're talking PC blades it wouldn't be fair not to mention
> Panologic and Teradici in particular because their solutions are pretty darn
> good for 3D applications (and just about anything else).
>
> Citrix provisioning server has a possible place but if you're using PC
> blades there may be less expensive solutions out there.
>
> regards,
>
> Rick
>
> --
> Ulrich Mack
> Quest Software
> Provision Networks Division
>
>
>
>
> On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 7:36 PM, Puneet Goel <g.puneet@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I have to deply thin client in a school for around 150 students. They
>> will be working on advanced IT apps like 3D Max, Maya, Autocad,
>> Photoshop, Oracle, SQL.
>>
>> can anyone guide me in finalizing server requirements for them.
>>
>> thanks
>
>

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