![]() ![]() With various DaaS offerings now available, not just hosted on Azure but on AWS and other public clouds too, it’s worth factoring in how these DaaS solutions work and what you pay for. If they had, more would have been suitably agile and able to switch to allowing everyone to work from home with fewer delays and disruptions than so many experienced. Unsurprisingly, most companies in the world didn’t factor a pandemic into their business continuity planning. This means not only are you not paying for resource consumption on the desktop, but you’re also no longer incurring associated costs such as storage. With Cycloud, as users start to log off, desktops are not just shut down and left in a stopped state they get deprovisioned. And that users attempting to log in to a new desktop session can get a session as quickly as possible. Since Cycloud can provision new desktops as demand increases or as resource bottlenecks are suddenly detected, you can ensure the users already on a desktop continue to have an optimal digital experience. Well, with Cycloud, you get much greater flexibility and simplicity for shutting down and deprovisioning desktops when it makes sense and similarly spinning up more desktops as demand calls for it. You may be familiar with the concept of setting desktops to not only stop in Azure but also to deallocate after they have been in a stopped state for some time. Part of the magic of Cycloud is through the use of Azure Scaling Sets which provides invaluable elasticity to ensure the best experience possible for your users. You also have the option to send a message to your users letting them know you detected high resource consumption and that if they are experiencing slowness or problems, they can log out and re-launch to get to the new desktop. If resource utilisation such as disk queuing, CPU or memory utilisation passes a set threshold, it can provision a new VM to help handle the increased demand. Cycloud can provision and deprovision VMs on a schedule that suits your worker’s hours or on-demand as consumption grows. We have been using Cycloud to help manage our desktops sensibly and cost-effectively for some time now. BUT while AVD is a must, you still run into the potential for a shocking bill due to unexpected consumption trends. Published apps and multi-session desktops make sense for these employees, and that can be a significant percentage of your workforce, making AVD a must for at least some of your users since those options are not offered currently with Cloud PC. You see, in a large organisation, you’re bound to have workers who use just a few apps and a browser for their work. AVD gives you greater flexibility and more options. If we wanted to accommodate those people who got along great with published apps and published desktops, Cloud PC may not make the most sense. There’s no multi-session OS option, and there’s no option to publish applications. Windows 365 Cloud PC is a 1:1 persistent virtual desktop. It actually worked out great – a relatively stable ride with only minor turbulence. We ended up putting hundreds of employees on multi-session desktops to accommodate those we couldn’t provide a Win10 desktop. Ironically, something the cloud is great for is allowing rapid scale. We also had 1:1 Windows 10 virtual desktops on-prem, but with supply chain issues in China, we couldn’t get enough storage fast enough to build enough desktops to support everyone who’d need one. This seems quite popular with young workers who prefer to use personal devices too. When the pandemic hit, we noticed close to 40% of our employees opted to just consume published applications. While Cloud PC does give you a flat monthly fee for a desktop which is predictable and nice to have, you must accept that you’ll be paying for that desktop regardless of circumstances and work styles. You may even have staff whose work style means they don’t use a desktop all day but do need one to complete some tasks – for example, clinical staff who do home visits. If you employ thousands of people, in a given week through PTO, sick leave, or emergency family leave, a small percentage of your staff will not be working. Nobody wants to get a nasty unexpected bill, but AVD could very well work out cheaper than Windows 365, particularly for larger organisations. Yes, with Azure Virtual Desktop (AVD), you’re paying for what you consume, and that can be scary. Does Cloud PC fit for your organization or would Azure Virtual Desktop fit better?īefore diving in headfirst, you need to weigh up your options. BUT all that glitters is not necessarily gold. In a Microsoft DaaS world where it has been purely pay-per-consumption, techies and IT managers have been breathing a sigh of relief at the thought of a flat monthly fee desktop option. The tech world is abuzz with the launch of Windows 365 Cloud PC. ![]()
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