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Published byLambert Bennett Modified over 9 years ago
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Thin Clienting Justin Spratt
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What is thin clienting? Thin clienting is a form of cloud computing—running applications on a server rather than on a local PC. Traditional thin clients transmit computer I/O (video feed, mouse and keyboard) over the network. A thin client with VESA mounts
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Thin Clients vs. PCs Are small Have few or no moving parts Consume 5-10 watts Store no local user data Boot off of an embedded operating system Are large Have hard drives and fans Consume 100-300 watts Can store local user data Boot off of an installed operating system PCsThin Clients
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Pure Graphical Thin Clients Traditional thin clients receive a video feed from remote multi-user server such as RDP on Windows Server. Most of these solutions boot Linux and run a Linux version of the Terminal Services client to connect to an RDP server. These clients can start as low as $100
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Mixed Thin and Thick Since some applications (such as multimedia) require thick clients, thin+thick clients have been created. Flash video in a web browser is one of the most difficult content types to handle, so one solution is to run the browser on the "thin" client.
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Advantages of Thin Clienting Direct, immediate savings – Units cost $100-500 ($500-1000 for a PC) – Installation and setup are faster than with a PC – Running Linux is always* free – Only one copy of software is required – Power usage is 1/10th of a traditional PC ($6,000 per 100 PCs per year) Indirect savings – Administration costs are lower – Roughly double the lifespan of a PC – Thin clients are far more durable than PCs – Reduction in data theft – Most clients are very difficult to infect with viruses *not really
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Diversity of Demand The graph illustrates the tendency of the requirement curve toward the mean consumption In other words, with n users using a single server, the power required is not n*power_per_user, it is closer to the average consumption of all of the users (e.g., take coffee breaks into account).
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Diversity of Demand 2 The graph illustrates the available power to an individual user on a thin client system. In other words, when you perform a very expensive operation (such as compiling a large project), more power is available (as most other users will be comparatively idle). (given that capacity is increased for each additional user)
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Key Applications Schools (hint: like this one) Libraries Sales point Development applications with complex environments Almost everywhere as latency decreases and throughput increases
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