The Virtual Desktop

Friday, September 24, 2010 by Matt Warman

I know some of my application development colleagues my say “heard it”, but a virtual desktop is cool! We are currently running Windows XP as our company standard. We moved our 9 physical servers running Windows 2000 on ancient (and failing hardware) about 2 years ago. Most of our clients are currently on XP, but some are looking into moving to Windows 7, and one is going to Vista. When my application development friends stop laughing, they are doing this because they have certified their testing with Vista, and they will have to re-certify with Windows 7. They want to move to Vista now, and move again in a year or two.
We can just follow the Windows upgrade path, but given the success of virtualizing our servers, my boss gave me the green light to review our desktop strategy. Some application development and management people would say why? Well it gives us flexibility in what we can do. If we just move to Windows 7, and our clients are still on XP, then we are too ahead of the curve in terms of support. We do have some XP only development tools, so why not just keep them on their OS? With a virtualized desktop, we can run any OS we want. If our clients want us to run specialized software, we can set up an OS just for that client. The other big change is that we are using Ubuntu 10.4 as our host operating System. This is to reduce the memory requirements, but it has other great side effects. Our consultants can learn (at least the basics) of a new OS! If they are under constraints, they can fire up their Windows VM and get to work, or they can do the basic stuff (surfing, checking email) on Ubuntu. In time they can learn how to install packages and other tasks without disrupting productivity. The can even use Windows 7 and learn it too. The best side effect (for management anyway) is that we can still get a lot of mileage out of our 5-7 year old laptops. Our laptops have 2 gigs of RAM, so even if we went pure Windows 7, we would have a performance hit, especially when you fire up an IDE like Eclipse! The more I play with Ubuntu, the more I like it. I will probably use it as my main OS, but others can use XP, Vista, Windows7, or whatever we can virtualize. Choice is a great thing!

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