It’s autumn, and the fall foliage is starting to appear. It reminds me how all those colorful leaves couldn’t make a canopy of shade or give leaf peepers a beautiful tapestry to admire without the unheralded tree branches. The branches do a yeomen’s job bringing essential nutrients from the trunk to the leaves and holding them up to the forces of the sun, rain, and wind.

Similarly, branch offices quietly provide services to the workers of today’s enterprise workforce. While the employees there are expected to be as productive as corporate office workers, who are usually collocated near data centers or the main internet circuits, they often face access and performance challenges.

Enterprise branch office access networks are often bandwidth-constrained and may be unreliable. But you still need to deliver quality video, whether it’s hosted on the corporate network or in the cloud.

When it comes to content delivery quality, video has significant requirements. With the need to deliver both voice and visual data in sync, it’s essential to effectively manage latency, loss, and jitter. Yet branches may use unreliable and or bandwidth-constrained network-access mediums in the last mile including cable, DSL, or wireless.

So how do enterprises deliver quality video to branches? Take a half hour out of your day and check out the Geek’s Guide to Video Optimization for Branch Offices on Wednesday, October 23, to see how, together, Citrix Virtual Apps and Desktops and Citrix SD-WAN can team up to offer enterprises a variety of options to deliver high-quality video, whether it’s hosted on premises or in the cloud.

In this session you will learn about:

I look forward to connecting with you on the Geek’s Guide to Video Optimization for Branch Offices and having robust discussion about how to deliver quality video to branch users! Leave your comments and questions below or connect with me on Twitter at @tweetmattbrooks.

Geek’s Guide to Video Optimization for Branch Offices
Date: Wednesday, October 23
Time: 12 p.m. ET
Register Now