App and desktop virtualization solutions are popular because employees want to use their own devices and have access to their apps outside the office. At the same time, installing and maintaining apps and desktops on individual computers for each user is expensive and difficult to manage. Virtual apps and desktops offer a better solution by residing on a central server from which IT can deploy hundreds of simulated apps and desktops to users at once. This eliminates the need to install these apps and desktops (and any patches and updates) on each computer, and users can interact with virtual apps and desktops with the same user experience as native ones.
Workspace virtualization takes this a step further by bundling multiple apps together into one unified, digital workspace. This simulates an entire computing workspace on a virtual machine, allowing the users’ applications to interact the same way they would on a physical machine. For example, workspace virtualization would allow a user to embed a spreadsheet into a word processing document; in conventional application virtualization, each individual app is virtualized separately so they cannot interact with each other.
For the enterprise, implementing a bring your own device (BYOD) program can significantly reduce device costs and time spent managing endpoints. With a virtualization solution in place, businesses can deliver corporate applications and data securely to any device.