A thin client platform can save you money over upgrading all of your business computers. They are easy to install, less susceptible to viruses and require minimal ...
A few weeks ago, MacEnterprise hosted a webcast concerning AquaConnect Terminal Server. ACTS enables a Mac OS X server to deliver the Mac OS desktop to just about any device with a network connection ...
From what I understand, thin clients are supposed to function just like workstations. Well, that hasn't been the case for me. I have a DOS based program that uses a printer table to asign each network ...
Tom's mini-PC can surf/stream, comes up short with office apps and doesn't do Windows 11, but is perfectly capable of running a thin-client OS in a VDI setup. In two previous articles I talked about ...
ND1750 and ND1950 thin client network displays save valuable desk space, decrease installation time, and simplify wall mounting. The units use one power supply and integrate the monitor with the Wyse ...
Thin clients are the kind of hardware that should be a home labber’s open secret, but somehow still feels like insider baseball. They are cheap, quiet, and usually built to last years in the office ...
Top-of-the-Line Dell Wyse 7040 thin client specifically designed with the highest levels of security and performance Cost-effective Dell Wyse 3030 LT thin client offers security, manageability and a ...
Wylie Wong is a freelance journalist who specializes in business, technology and sports. He is a regular contributor to the CDW family of technology magazines. Thin clients? Really? Athough these ...
How thin can you go? New clients continue to be introduced, like HP’s unveiling of the t310 G2 All-in-One Zero Client in January. With client types on the market ranging from traditional thick desktop ...
Thin clients are only disappointing if you give them the wrong job ...
Sean Gallagher, who began his career as an IT project manager for the Navy, has spent two decades as a technology writer and reviewer. There’s been a vast gap in thin client technology for some time — ...
In the 1970s and 1980s, the ubiquitous model of corporate and academic computing was that of many users logging in remotely to a single server to use a sliver of its precious processing time. With the ...