Brian Timperley

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Cloudgate lines up as desktop replacement

Posted by Brian Timperley
Brian Timperley
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on Tuesday, 15 April 2014
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Cloudgate, a hand-sized device, aims to completely replace the desktop for a fraction of the cost.

So says Jonathan Young, head of product at Cloudware, who argues that desktop computers are a massive drain on the IT resources of most organisations.

"An IT department has a primary function – to deliver applications to end-users. Everything else – security, uptime, backups, support and maintenance – are important, but secondary to the primary function," says Young.


According to Young, the core innovation that makes this possible is Cloudware, a South African-developed application delivery solution designed specifically for low-bandwidth conditions.
"We have become lost in the complexity of the secondary options. A new model exists to reduce that complexity. You simply unplug your screen, mouse and keyboard from the old PC, plug it into a Cloudgate device and you have secure access to the entire corporate Windows environment and an Android desktop."

Cloudgate is hybrid, says Young. "Everything Android. Everything Windows. On a single device. Thin computing worldwide has been trying to achieve the holy triumvirate: performance, flexibility and cost. Cloudgate is the first to achieve all three."

To Young, thin computing is exactly that; it's thin and watered down. "It is void of all the things users want. Cloudgate gives users what they want, first and foremost, while ensuring business gets what it needs at the same time.

"We chose Android for the desktop because we found that users rejected earlier versions of thin client computing as being too restrictive," explains Young. "It turns out that giving people a desktop replacement that's just like their old machine, except without all the fun bits, is actually counter-productive. People need to be able to use the Internet and social media, for example, and sometimes to send private e-mails. But now none of that activity happens on corporate servers, and nobody in the business has to support it."

In fact, says Young, Cloudgate eliminates the need for desktop-level support and maintenance entirely. "If anything happens to the device, you just reset everything to the factory defaults and erase it," he says. "There's no company data on it to lose."

Based on the current cost of desktop support services, that's an instant saving of R200 to R300 a month, he says.

"With Cloudware, all a company's applications and data are managed from the data centre. The only thing that leaves that secure environment is a set of instructions for what to display on the screen. That means you can deliver any Windows application to any device."

In practice, he explains, that means Cloudgate users have a single Cloudware icon on their Android desktop that gives access to all their company applications, files and data.

It's completely secure – no information from the central server can be shared across to the device, not even by copying and pasting, says Young. "That option can be turned on if necessary, but the default is that the two environments are entirely separate."

Cloudgate also draws only 10W of power, says Young, "the same as an energy-saving light bulb. If you're replacing an average 300W desktop, that means the power savings are almost the same as the monthly cost of the device, rendering it effectively free.

"The desktop PC has dominated the office for nearly 40 years, but it's outlived its usefulness," says Young. "It makes no economic or management sense to put all that processing power and storage into a standalone machine that will never run at more than a fraction of its capacity. The principal physical reason to not move everything to the data centre has been slow network connections – but Cloudware solves that problem. Within a few years, the desktop PC as we know it will seem as quaint and outdated as the typewriter."

Additional Reading and Source:

http://www.itweb.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=72009

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Cloud versus the traffic

Posted by Brian Timperley
Brian Timperley
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on Tuesday, 15 April 2014
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As more commuters move into cities, congestion has caused a decline in productivity. The workplace now has to adapt to this problem while meeting employee demands, writes BRIAN TIMPERLEY.

 

 

Although the “work from anywhere” phrase has been thrown around ad nauseum, the truth is it has never become a reality. Corporates, specifically some of the big financial institutions in Sandton, are realising they have to offer flexible working time and flexible computing in order to attract and retain the best talent, while ensuring optimum productivity from every employee. 

 

To answer the question about how companies go about retaining staff, and lessen the impact of unproductive time in traffic, the simple answer is to allow them the flexibility and accessibility to get the job done. There’s no real need to ensure employees are sitting in physical office space any longer, since people can now collaborate and meet virtually. Talented individuals are inevitably moving to companies that afford them the work flexibility they demand, and saving hours everyday in productive and personal time.

 

This raises another question about what the future working world will look like and what technology will be used to streamline the process of working from any location and on any device. Forget about referring to the office or workplace of the future; the reality exists now! 

 

The fact is, access to data and applications is more important than the historical concerns over available connectivity. Connectivity has become a commodity in recent years, and its cost is driving down almost as fast as its access is improving. Our current levels of access in metropolitan and outlying areas provide real freedom to access data from anywhere. 

 

We need to redefine the way we work, and rather focus on being more collaborative with co-workers, sharing and accessing applications, documents and data when needed. The ability to access documents from anywhere means you’re achieving two things: you’re avoiding sitting in unproductive traffic congestion and you’re getting more done in the time available to you. 

 

Cloud-based collaboration, which is available through a number of operators locally and internationally, delivers far higher levels of efficiency because you’re collaborating on the same master document, avoiding the need to send copies of documents back and forth multiple times. True cloud-based collaboration means you can track changes back and forward, for as long as needed, and never fear the potential loss of critical data.

 

Users simply have to embrace a new way of working. The positive, tangible benefits are clear: 

  • Short & long-term productivity gains
  • Considerable cost reductions
  • IT departments spend far less time supporting the mundane, and focus on innovation 

  

There are more than enough options available to businesses of varying sizes to ensure their employees remain productive, are able to work remotely and from any device. We’re no longer constrained by the desktop PC or laptop computer; modern tablets, smartphones and other handheld devices offer the same functionality, processing power and a more intuitive interface than antiquated desktop PCs ever have. 

 

Allowing employees to work remotely while connecting via VPN is a legacy approach to remote productivity, and often proves more cumbersome and challenging than it’s worth; that was how we worked ten years ago. More reliable, and readily available connectivity in South Africa, enables users to gain access from anywhere; and newer, lighter and more robust technologies are available on the market… technologies that in many cases, render VPNs unnecessary. If you’re connected to the internet, you’re able to securely work, without the cumbersome configuration of a VPN. 

 

While everyone appears to be fixated on how mobile their employees can be, the focus should rather be on how accessible their applications and content is. In fact, most “mobile” applications are watered down versions of the original, with limited functionality; in reality, fully-fledged applications are already being delivered to devices through any internet connection, allowing corporate networks to be securely accessed from anywhere. 

 

The key criteria to attract and retain talent is to allow them flexibility in their work. Make it clear that the location from which they work is irrelevant, and provide access to data and applications to get the job done. 

 

Once we’ve convinced people to avoid sitting in unproductive traffic jams, we’ll have made some real progress. Always bear in mind that happy staff are more productive. If morning traffic is a nightmare, pull over, enjoy a coffee and plough through your emails, update your financials, or write that urgent sales report… all from your iPad if you like. 

 

If traffic is always bad, many companies now allow employees to work from home in the morning to avoid rush-hour. Those who get in very early to avoid sitting in traffic, are then entitled to leave early. The question is whether or not companies can embrace mixing the two, which is the very definition of flexibility. One thing is certain, today’s ability to work remotely enables any level of flexibility a business chooses.

 

There’s a new way of working... start embracing it or risk being left behind. 

 

* Brian Timperley, MD, Cloudware

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Cloudgate to end 40-year reign of the desktop PC

Posted by Brian Timperley
Brian Timperley
Brian Timperley has not set their biography yet
User is currently offline
on Tuesday, 15 April 2014
in Uncategorized

Desktop computers are a massive drain on the IT resources of most organisations. “An IT department has a primary function: to deliver applications to end-users. Everything else – security, uptime, backups, support and maintenance – are important, but secondary to the primary function,” says Jonathan Young of Cloudware. “We have become lost in the complexity of the secondary options. A new model exists to reduce that complexity.”

Cloudgate is a hand-sized device that, says Young, completely replaces the desktop as we know it for a fraction of the cost. “You simply unplug your screen, mouse and keyboard from the old PC, plug it into a Cloudgate device and you have secure access to the entire corporate Windows environment – and an Android desktop.”

The core innovation that makes this possible is Cloudware, a South African-developed application delivery solution designed specifically for low-bandwith conditions. “With Cloudware, all a company’s applications and data are managed from the data centre,” says Young. “The only thing that leaves that secure environment is a set of instructions for what to display on the screen. That means you can deliver any Windows application to any device.”

In practice, that means Cloudgate users have a single Cloudware icon on their Android desktop that gives access to all their company applications, files and data. It’s completely secure – no information from the central server can be shared across to the device, “not even by copying and pasting”, says Young. “That option can be turned on if necessary, but the default is that the two environments are entirely separate.

“We chose Android for the desktop because we found that users rejected earlier versions of thin client computing as being too restrictive,” explains Young. “It turns out that giving people a desktop replacement that’s just like their old machine, except without all the fun bits, is actually counter-productive. People need to be able to use the internet and social media, for example, and sometimes to send private emails. But now none of that activity happens on corporate servers, and nobody in the business has to support it.”

In fact, says Young, Cloudgate eliminates the need for desktop-level support and maintenance entirely. “If anything happens to the device, you just reset everything to the factory defaults and erase it,” he says. “There’s no company data on it to lose. Based on the current cost of desktop support services, that’s an instant saving of R200 to R300 a month.”

Cloudgate also draws only 10W of power, says Young, “the same as an energy-saving lightbulb. If you’re replacing an average 300W desktop, that means the power savings are almost the same as the monthly cost of the device, rendering it effectively free.

“The desktop PC has dominated the office for nearly 40 years, but it’s outlived its usefulness,” says Young. “It makes no economic or management sense to put all that processing power and storage into a standalone machine that will never run at more than a fraction of its capacity. The principal physical reason to not move everything to the data centre has been slow network connections – but Cloudware solves that problem. Within a few years, the desktop PC as we know it will seem as quaint and outdated as the typewriter.”

Additional Reading and Sources:

http://companies.mybroadband.co.za/blog/2014/03/17/cloudgate-to-end-40-year-reign-of-the-desktop-pc/

http://www.callcentrehub.com/news-2/2223-cloudgate-to-end-40-year-reign-of-the-desktop-pc

http://kopiarki.biz/kserokopiarki-2/cloudgate-to-end-40-year-reign-of-the-desktop-pc/

http://it-online.co.za/2014/03/17/cloudgate-ends-40-year-reign-of-desktop-pc/

http://www.themarketingsite.com/news/36727/cloudgate-to-end-year-reign-of-the-desktop-pc

 

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Cloudware - Local solutions make cloud accessible

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Brian Timperley
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Local solutions are designed for local infrastructure constraints, and are simple and affordable to implement and run, says Turrito Networks.

http://www.itweb.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=65547:Local-solutions-make-cloud-accessible&catid=69

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Cloudware presenting at ITWeb Cloud Conference

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ITWeb Cloud Computing Summit 2013 (16 & 17 July, 2013)

http://www.itweb.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=63191&Itemid=2844

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Cloudware helps Reach for a Dream

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Brian Timperley
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Business Day article on Cloudware

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Brian Timperley
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Preparing for a mobile workforce beyond ‘bring your own device’

http://www.bdlive.co.za/life/gadgets/2013/06/19/preparing-for-a-mobile-workforce-beyond-bring-your-own-device

BY NIVEN PERUMAL, JUNE 19 2013, 05:55

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Vodacom Partner of the Year 2012-2013

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Partner of the Year was awarded to Turrito Networks for the period 2012-2013 by Vodacom Business, as their top reseller of connectivity and unified communication services.

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