Microsoft earlier this week released a public community technology preview of Windows Thin PC, a smaller-footprint, locked down version of Windows 7 that organisations can use to repurpose their existing PCs as thin clients.
In the Windows Thin PC CTP, Microsoft has added support for RemoteFX, a set of desktop virtualisation features that allow video and other rich content to be delivered to desktop, laptop and thin-client devices, Karri Alexion-Tiernan, director of product management for Microsoft Desktop Virtualisation, said in a Monday blog post.
The CTP also allows customers to use System Centre Configuration Manager to deploy and manage Windows Thin PC images, and it includes a write filter that blocks user and application writes to disk as an endpoint security measure, Alexion-Tiernan said.
PCs running Windows Thin PC won't require Microsoft's Virtual Desktop Access license (VDA), which allows customers to virtualise home PC and kiosks that aren't covered by SA for an annual fee of $US100 per device, Gavriella Schuster, general manager for Windows product management, said in a blog post last month.
Although the Windows Thin PC CTP is open to all customers, only those with Software Assurance subscriptions will be able to use it once it’s a finished product. Software Assurance is a volume licensing program that lets customer upgrade to new software that's released during the term of their contract with Microsoft, and to spread payments over a three-year period.
Virtualisation tools are included in Microsoft's Desktop Optimisation Pack (MDOP), but partners have previously said they believe Software Assurance is an impediment to Microsoft's virtualisation momentum.
However, partners say Microsoft has made moves to address virtualisation licensing policies that have caused angst in the past. Last July, Microsoft made virtual desktop access rights part of Software Assurance and stopped requiring Windows Client Software Assurance customers to buy a separate license to access Windows in a VDI environment.
Previously, Microsoft required SA customers to pay an additional $US23 per device annually for Windows Virtual Enterprise Centralised Desktop (VECD), a device-based subscription license that was required for customers that run Windows desktops virtually from a data centre.
This article originally appeared at crn.com
Issue: 315 | May 2013
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