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Windows Vista Virtualization: What You Need To Know To Get Started: Page 5 of 6

A second major barrier to Vista adoption is application compatibility. Microsoft has modified several core components of the Windows code with Vista and, in many cases, this breaks applications. (See How to Manage Windows Vista Application Compatibility.)

If you decide that you don't want to centralize all your desktops and intend to deploy Vista on each one of your endpoints, then perhaps you need to take a really close look at application virtualization (AppV). AppV is much like machine virtualization, but instead of capturing an entire operating system installation, it captures each and every application you deploy on your systems. Basically, you "sandbox" each application so that it does not make any actual modifications at all when it runs on a system. This is all done through the use of an application virtualization agent that resides either within the application itself or on the operating system.

The single most powerful advantage AppV gives you is that, once an application is virtualized, it will run on any Windows operating system. Just think of it. Each time you move from one OS to another, you have to test all your applications, repackage them to meet target OS requirements, and then deploy them.

With AppV all that goes away since, once the application is virtualized, it will run on any Windows OS. And, because there are no changes to the target OS, you do not need to install the application, but rather simply copy it to the system. That's because AppV does not capture the application installation process like other systems do, it captures the running state of the application. That's powerful and may even warrant the adoption of AppV even if you don't migrate to Vista.

Like machine virtualization, several vendors have released AppV engines. Microsoft offers Application Virtualization 4.5. Symantec offers Software Virtualization Solution (SVS) through its Altiris division. Citrix offers AppV through Citrix XenApp (formerly Presentation Server 4.5). Thinstall offers ThinstallVS. Of these, only Symantec offers a free or personal edition of its AppV engine. This personal edition of SVS is fully functional and can be run on up to 10 PCs. What's even better is that the download site also includes over 40 pre-virtualized applications.