Pano Logic ditches Microsoft RDP for its own remote desktop protocol

Posted by Alessandro Perilli   |   Tuesday, November 18, 2008   |   1 Comments

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The startup Pano Logic releases today version 2.5 of its VDI platform.

Its Virtual Desktop Solution (VDS) is comprised of a connection broker, the Pano Management Server, that currently supports VMware Infrastructure, and a minimal thin client that doesn’t require an operating system or any other software.

This 2.5 release is specially important for the company as it ditches Microsoft RDP as the remote desktop protocol of choice.
Pano Logic developed its own remoting protocol called Console Direct, which delivers audio, video and USB device interfaces on the zero client.

The company published a presentation of this new technology.

Pano Logic is not the first company working to replace RDP in VDI environments: Qumranet (recently acquired by Red Hat) was the first to drop the Microsoft protocol for their own, called SPICE,  and VMware is working with Teradici to do the same.
Even Microsoft itself took serious steps to renew RDP for VDI purposes, acquiring the company Calista.

The only VDI players that are seriously enhancing RDP without looking at replacements are Citrix and Quest/Provision Networks that recently achieved a 8x compression factor for RDP sessions.
We’ll see which approach will return the most on the investment once that Microsoft will have integrated Calista technology.

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1 Comments

Blogger Stuart Friday, January 30, 2009 6:56:00 PM  
Pano is an incomplete solution – here’s why

The challenge with Pano is the limited desktop performance – display resolution, video and graphics. While better than plain RDP, it is a compromised experience compared to a PC at the user desk.

There is another Zero Client solution that provides and un-compromised user experience and that is PC-over-IP (PCoIP) technology.

To be truly cost effective a Zero client needs to handle any user - from terminal/task workers, mainstream office users and power users that may require full DVI resolutions and full frame rate 3D graphics. This is what PCoIP delivers.

Check out this Zero Client that is an all-in-one display that Samsung just announced (SyncMaster 930ND) it supports VMware View (aka VDI) and PCoIP to be forward compatible when Vmware VIew integrates PCoIP technology (see vmware announcement with Teradici at the Sept08 Vmworld)

See this performance demo including HD video and 3D graphics. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzGmwNIpFG4

For full disclosure, I am the Director of Business Development at Teradici. For more info go to www.teradici.com

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