Computerworld
Quick Menu
Search



Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
Computerworld 2007Subscribe to Computerworld
40 years of the most authoritative source of news and information for IT leaders.

ClearCube announces thin clients


Active Comments

Nationwide Insurance says: We were a Clearcube customer and built a platform around their software solution, but it failed. There are more issues...
Ned Goldberg says: Clearcube does not manifacture theri own thin clients, you can actually order them from skymall. We have bought product from...


January 24, 2008 (IDG News Service) ClearCube Technology on Tuesday announced centralized software and hardware to help thin clients behave more like PCs and to help administrators deploy and manage virtual environments.

The company announced the R1350 PC Blade, which stores data and resources accessible to remote thin clients. The blade establishes a secure connection with a thin client and delivers data, graphics and complete PC functionality, the vendor claims, including support for USB (Universal Serial Bus) drives attached to the thin client.

Implementing Teradici's PC-over-IP (Internet Protocol) technology, the new PC blade can deliver 32-bit graphics, which overcomes network latency to provide real-time graphics to thin clients, said Rick Hoffman, CEO of ClearCube. Teradici's technology compresses the graphics output on the PC blade and sends it over a network, with a Teradici chip on the thin client that decompresses the graphics.

The R1350 blade runs Intel's Core 2 Duo processors and supports PCI Express graphics cards. It supports Trusted Platform Management 1.2 (TPM), a hardware-based authentication technology for system security.

The company also announced two thin clients, the I9420 I/Port and C7420 C/Port, which use Teradici technology to deliver better graphics, ClearCube said.

The I9420, which supports two monitors, connects to the PC blades using a copper-based Ethernet connection. The C7420 C/Port, which also supports two monitors, accommodates fiber-optic Ethernet connections. The new hardware allows USB devices including printers, USB drives and webcams to link to the thin clients, Hoffman said.

Designed for financial and public-sector organizations, the new products combine security, connectivity, better graphics and longer distances of connectivity, Hoffman said. In case of a disaster, a broker in a financial organization can shift work to a thin client at home that connects to a PC blade. The data sits on the blade, keeping it secure, Hoffman said.

ClearCube also announced Sentral v5.6, an update to its virtual environment management software that allows the deployment and management of physical and virtualized desktops. The software supports the new thin clients, enables better graphics and allows a server to establish connections over longer distances, Hoffman said.

Sentral 5.6 works with virtualization products from vendors including VMware and Xen.

ClearCube, which started off as a hardware company, is shifting its focus to software, said Roger Kay, president of industry analysis firm Endpoint Technologies Associates. The company has regrouped itself around its proprietary software stack, Kay said.

"If you look at virtualization as a piece of computing to apply to IT infrastructure -- virtual storage, virtual networking and virtual displays -- their [software] covers different pieces," Kay said. "ClearCube is morphing from a solutions company to a software company. They are willing to unbundle their software and sell it."


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2008 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

What People Are Saying

Webcast
Moving to Windows Vista: The Promise, The Reality
Windows Vista: Necessity and Opportunity IDG survey says...that while migration to Windows Vista looms inevitable, the road is fraught with challenges from application compatibility to integration issues to upgrade costs. Fortunately one company is stepping up with solutions and services to help manage Vista in a mixed environment and to automate key aspects of that management chore.
View this webcast. 
See more Webcasts more
White Papers
Red Hat CIO whitepaper: Date Centre Transitions: UNIX to Linux
Red Hat open source solutions provide the flexibility and value that the modern CIO needs to transform today's business into tomorrow's successful enterprise. Read how Linux(R) overcame the initial challenges of the industry, and what triggers so many companies to migrate legacy UNIX systems to the open source stack.
Download this white paper now! 
White Papers
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services.
The 2008 ERP in Manufacturing Benchmark Report Summary
IronPort Web Reputation Filters Tech Note
Designed to Manage Lean Principles
View more whitepapers