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AMD Teams up with Virtual Desktop Pioneer

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 31 August 2007 - 09:15 · 6 comments & 3573 views

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Hosted desktop pioneer Nivio has taken an undisclosed investment from AMD to help it work on its ambition of making virtual Windows XP desktops and software accessible from any connected device -- even a Linux PC or a smartphone. The Nivio service uses virtualization to provide users with a virtual PC, which they can configure and even synchronize with their own PC, if they have one. The virtual PCs are hosted on AMD servers at data centers in Geneva and New Delhi, and streamed out over broadband.

Nivio says it can stream a Windows XP desktop, complete with applications, to any device with a compatible web browser. Software -- including Adobe and Microsoft applications -- can be rented by the month, so users don't have to purchase a package that's only needed for the duration of a short project, said the company's founder Sachin Duggal.

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News source: PCWorld

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 6 additional comments
#1 Shinji on 31 Aug 2007 - 10:01
sounds good to me
virtualization is good. I gotta have some more cores...
#2 linuxamp on 31 Aug 2007 - 11:39
Looks like AMD is trying to get it's share of the virtualization hype. Lets see how this partnership stands up against the Intel/Vmware and Citrix/XenSource/(MS?) unions.
#3 RAID 0 on 31 Aug 2007 - 20:23
I really wish AMD would put everything they have on bringing us a new CPU. Why mess with all this other stuff, when they're lagging so far behind.
#4 Ledward on 01 Sep 2007 - 00:57
What part of "broadband streaming is too slow for image-intensive apps" don't they understand?
(1 reply) #5 toadeater on 01 Sep 2007 - 04:55
How is this different from VMWare?
#5.1 basix on 01 Sep 2007 - 06:26
the streaming part?

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