Network Computing is part of the Informa Tech Division of Informa PLC

This site is operated by a business or businesses owned by Informa PLC and all copyright resides with them. Informa PLC's registered office is 5 Howick Place, London SW1P 1WG. Registered in England and Wales. Number 8860726.

AppSense Upgrades User Virtualization Platform In 8.1 Release

AppSense, a provider of user virtualization technology to enterprise computing environments, has upgraded its flagship platform to enable workers to use a customized, personalized virtual desktop but with management features that give IT professionals the control they need. The company says version 8.1 of its user virtualization platform (UVP) addresses the latest trend in enterprise IT, in which workers are accessing corporate IT resources on a wider array of endpoint devices than a desktop PC.

The upgraded UVP product, AppSense Environment Manager 8.1, adds a modular design that enables IT managers to assemble the features they need for their organization, says Doug Lane, director of product marketing for AppSense. Version 8.1 also adds more granular controls for IT administrators to manage the virtualized user image, such as regulating user behavior based on existence of specific files, folders, OS versions and other conditions. For end users, the upgrade delivers faster login times and tighter integration with the Windows login and logout experience.

A user virtualization platform integrates with virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) technology, and AppSense is actually a partner with Citrix, maker of a widely used VDI product. Industry analysts forecast that 50 million new virtual desktops will enter the corporate workplace over the next three years, according to a Citrix white paper.

Before UVP, letting each end user in an enterprise preserve a customized, personalized virtual desktop image turned out to be expensive, particularly because of the cost of storage, says Lane. One alternative would be to deliver a "non-persistent desktop" that delivers the same image to everyone, though he said employees don’t like that.

  • 1