According to industry analysts, banks are poised to spend more than $550 million on branch renewal in 2004. Banks are adding new technology to their branches, with plans to significantly enhance ...
Wyse’s SecureSC integrates Citrix Password Manager(TM) and .NET smart card technology from Gemalto into the Wyse’s Microsoft Windows XPe thin clients. This add-on is designed for healthcare ...
Thin-client hardware has standardized on x86 architecture, but software varies significantly among vendors -- major manufacturers like Dell and HP increasingly rely on third-party operating systems ...
For Charles Hagstrand, software upgrades were nothing less than excruciating. As CIO at CapitalCare Medical Group, , a physician-owned, primary-care medical practice in upstate New York, he would ...
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 ...
A few years ago, thin clients were all the rage. Leading the charge was Sun Microsystems, driven perhaps by a disdain for Microsoft, but many others were producing a variety of thin-client products on ...
Functionally RDP is a thin client system, regardless of whether your local computer has a lot of resources; you only are really using I/O at your location. Everything else is done on some computer ...
How thin can you go? New clients continue to be introduced, like HP’s unveiling of the t310 G2 All-in-One Zero Client in January. With client types on the market ranging from traditional thick desktop ...
HP is unveiling its first mobile thin client and dramatically increasing investments in thin client technology. HP unveiled its first mobile thin client and two additional desktop thin client products ...
Verizon Wireless is hip deep in a project to replace thousands of call center PCs with Sun Microsystems’ thin client terminals. And the carrier is already counting up the savings. With about 5,000 Sun ...
Major hardware vendors like Dell, HP, and Lenovo have commoditized thin-client hardware and under-invested in their proprietary operating systems, opening the market to third-party software platforms.