Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization for Desktops
With Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization for Desktops, complete desktop environments are hosted as virtual desktops on servers located in a centralized datacenter. Users connect to these virtual desktops, which can be either Windows or Red Hat® Enterprise Linux® desktops, using either inexpensive thin clients or repurposed PCs.
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization: Live Migration
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization includes Live Migration, which provides the ability to move a running virtual machine between physical hosts with no interruption to service.
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization: Hypervisor
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization (RHEV) Hypervisor is a compact, full featured virtualization platform for quickly and easily deploying and managing virtualized guests.
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization: High Availability
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization includes High Availability, which provides the foundation for building a highly available virtual infrastructure.
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization: Quickstart
Accelerate the deployment of virtualization in your environment.
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization for Servers: Features
Server virtualization offers tremendous benefits for enterprise IT organizations - server consolidation, hardware abstraction, and internal clouds deliver a high degree of operational efficiency.
Canto: DAM 2.0: Collaboration and Project Management Control
Learn how digital asset management has evolved to address the needs of today’s sophisticated workflows. Digital asset management (DAM) today must support the needs of organizations that collaborate on project development – locally or globally, rely on approvals and communication for quality control, and base access and distribution on complex, variable conditions.
i365 Seagate: Ten Steps to Safeguard Business Data
Your business has distinct needs that differ from either consumers or larger businesses. Sales and customer service are your main priorities, and while IT functions are important, you may not have staff dedicated to them. In that case you may choose to outsource part of your IT needs. Even if your business does have dedicated IT staff, they probably concentrate on business productivity and administration, with responsibilities ranging from implementation of new systems—such as ERP / business management—to desktop support. As a result, tasks such as data backup, security and retention often do not get the attention they deserve, especially given the impact they may have if not performed adequately. What should you do to protect your data if your resources are limited?