Citrix Enables On-Demand Computing. Any User, Any Location, Any Device
Citrix XenDesktop Delivers Virtualized Desktops Statewide and Helps Department Repurpose $250,000 per Year in Hardware Costs
08 June 2010 Source: www.citrix.com
Citrix Systems, Inc. announced today that Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) has deployed Citrix XenDesktop with FlexCast delivery technology and integrated app delivery with Citrix XenApp to deliver virtualized desktops and applications on demand to employees statewide in disparate field offices. Whether from a PC, Mac, laptop or smartphone of their choice, employees now have immediate access to their virtual desktops anytime, anywhere and on any device. Now, less than a full year into their desktop virtualization implementation, ADF&G expects to repurpose $250,000 over the next few budget cycles as money that once went to hardware refreshes can be used for other important projects.
ADF&G - whose mission is to protect, maintain, and improve the fish, game, and aquatic plant resources of the state, and manage their use and development in the best interest of the people and economy of Alaska - includes more than 1,200 employees working across the state in nearly 40 offices and in the field.
According to Corey Kos, the department's infrastructure manager, ADF&G spent up to $600,000 per year on new desktops before implementing the department's Citrix solution. The need to manage a constant refresh cycle for aging hardware created a drain on both IT staff resources and the annual budget. With an information technology (IT) staff of just 13, ADF&G was struggling to meet the demands of a more than 100-to-1 ratio of employees to IT technicians.
With virtualization, virtual desktops are delivered to the department's existing PCs, extending the life of their hardware. Since all the data, applications and processing lives in the datacenter, everyone has a rich, high-definition experience, no matter what the end user's device. Also, IT staff can now centrally manage desktops in Anchorage, Fairbanks or Kodak - all from their main office in Juneau.
"The ability to manage the department's desktops and applications centrally in the datacenter is a tremendous time savings for our IT staff," said Kos. "And now that 30 percent of our budget is not tied up in the hardware refresh cycle, we have the opportunity to move forward on exciting new projects to innovate the way ADF&G works and improve how we fulfill our mission."
One current project under development will deliver applications via XenApp to inexpensive point-of-sale kiosk stations at top vendors in Alaska. In 2009, ADF&G sold more than $27 million in licenses, stamps and big game tags. With these kiosks, citizens will have the ability to easily self-apply for fishing and hunting licenses in stores and relieve some of the strain on the licensing offices.
ADF&G are also looking to XenDesktopto make their field offices truly mobile. Almost all of the applications used by ADF&G are custom applications. XenDesktop with integrated on-demand app delivery provides the ability to deliver ADF&G's applications - most of which are custom - on demand, giving users the flexibility to access their applications from any location on any device. "We have client server applications that are Java-based and most of our custom applications are for data entry or for biologists to run reports, and look up licensing information," explained Kos. "The ability to have those applications with them out in the field would allow them to access real-time data to how much fish and game have been caught. If a fishing quota has been met, they can make recommendations as soon as that last fish is caught."
"XenDesktop provide the ability to work with mission-critical applications anytime, anywhere and on any device," said David Podwojski, director of Government, Education & Health for Citrix. "Alaska's Department of Fish and Game is using that on-demand access to enable them to work wherever they are - whether that's a field office in Kodak or on a boat on the Togiak River. They are at the forefront of virtualization for the State of Alaska and other departments are watching and learning from their continued success."
ADF&G hopes to allocate their continued hardware cost savings to further improve the infrastructure and delivery of systems throughout the department. In the next phase of their virtualization implementation, ADF&G is looking to add Citrix NetScaler VPX load balancer virtual appliance and Citrix Branch Repeater to provide a high-definition desktop and application experience to branch and mobile users while dramatically reducing bandwidth costs and simplifying branch infrastructure.
The road to ADF&G's virtualization story, Kos admits, did not start with Citrix. In fact, their initial foray into desktop virtualization was unsuccessful. "The system we started with was difficult to manage and once we got to 20 seats, we found that its performance was not scaling well. We were about to give up when we were presented the opportunity to test a proof of concept with Citrix," Kos explained.
While the initial attempt to virtualize desktops may have left some skeptical, XenDesktop has allayed these concerns and proven the value of desktop virtualization. According to Kos, ADF&G staff is looking forward to and requesting an expanded deployment of XenDesktop.
ADF&G has launched a pilot multi-tenancy project, in which other state government departments can use ADF&G's virtualization capabilities for on-demand access to applications. "We're letting other departments leverage what we already have," said Kos. "They're using the expertise we already have, with no need to spend time and money on reinventing the wheel."