| By HP News Desk | Article Rating: |
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| February 5, 2008 12:00 PM EST | Reads: |
7,883 |
HP is about to put out a novel 1GHz Celeron laptop it calls a mobile thin client, its first, apparently the result of its acquisition of Neoware.
Wyse, the other remaining thin client maven, beat HP, now the market leader, to the punch a few months ago and added two more models the other day looking much like HP's.
HP's thing, which starts at $725, has no drive or fan or any moving parts at all; it's thoroughly solid-state including the 1GB flash module.
Dubbed the XPe-based Compaq 6720t, it connects to a centralized server (or virtual PC or blade PC for that matter) where all the processing and storage is done, a fact that could do wonders for security and energy efficiency. Imagine life without laptop-with-sensitive-data-gone-missing stories.
Connection is made over a secure VPN Internet link and, as part of HP's desktop virtualization vision, it supports VMware VDI solutions.
It features a 15.4-inch screen along with Wi-Fi-certified WLAN and supports wireless 3G broadband via a PC memory card slot. It has 1GB of memory and three USB 2.0 ports.
Administrators can support the thing remotely. HP imagines them installing, managing, updating and executing applications simultaneously across a fleet of the widgets.
HP has also introduced two more traditional thin clients: a $499 XPe-based Compaq t5730 and a $450 Debian-based t5735.
Meanwhile, Wyse is using a 1.2Ghz Via chip in its new X90l and x90Le mobile thin clients and can leverage Citrix' Presentation Server and XenDesktop, VMware's Virtual Desktop Infrastructure and Microsoft Windows Terminal Server.
Published February 5, 2008 Reads 7,883
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