XDA Developers on MSN
Thin clients finally made sense once I stopped treating them like PCs
The key is to remember the old adage about the right tool for the right job.
If your business already manages server resources and you’re looking for a simpler endpoint device solution, you may want to consider thin client technology. Thin clients are more flexible, easier to ...
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 ...
Thin clients seem to be a perennial runner-up to full-featured desktops, but we think the time is right to stop thinking "what if?" and to get rid of those clunky desktop PCs. Thin clients take the ...
Thin clients have evolved from simple terminals into modern endpoints capable of supporting VDI, DaaS, and SaaS workloads. Advances in remote display protocols, cloud services, and x86 hardware have ...
Working in the IT security field, you spend every waking hour striving to improve protection and lower risk. Then another computing technology emerges — the Internet, wireless networking, mobile ...
In its infancy, Sun’s Sun Ray was a network-clobbering, sometimes stuttering example of what thin-client computing on Unix-like systems could be. Now it’s much more stable and much, much thinner. The ...
I could not agree more with Chris Dawson that, given the choice between cobbling together parts from a bunch of lame PCs and buying new thin clients, that buying new thin clients is the proper choice ...
I kinda work with a thin client (though my thin client is an M1 Max MBP) - I do most of my work on VMs that I connect to via VSCode remoting, but it's nice having a reasonably fast machine for VSCode ...
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