Businesses looking to save money on IT deployments and significantly reduce
their carbon footprint should investigate MiniFrame's
SoftXpand
Business system.
SoftXpand installs onto a desktop PC system, to which six monitors, six mice
and six keyboards are attached. Six users can then log on simultaneously and use
what feels like a traditional desktop PC.
The theory behind this configuration is that a traditional desktop PC has
underused processing power, which could easily be used to service six user
accounts running under one operating system.
Had the system been linked through an RJ45 cable, using layer-3 switching
would make the systems essentially separate, with each user being unaware that
five others are sharing the same system. However, the USB cabling and graphics
card connections mean that user systems will essentially be located closer to
each other, probably in visual contact.
The benefits would be that firms deploying the package would need only one
system and a fully configured backup system in the unlikely event of a failure.
Application management and other associated system management costs would
similarly be reduced, since initial setup would be a once-only exercise.
Patching and system administration would be limited to the one desktop system.
The peripherals are standard, and the desktop PC is to all intents and
purposes standard, albeit with subtle modifications to improve performance and
reliability. For instance the power supply used in the system is a more reliable
and energy efficient model.
Users log on to the host and can access any applications installed by the
SoftXpand administrator, be they standard office productivity or
processor-intensive graphics applications. However, these applications have to
be
certified
for use by MiniFrame, since profiles for each user need to be serviced
correctly by the applications. Firms needing to use non-certified applications
should consider this before deciding to use SoftXpand.
The hardware used in our review of SoftXpand was a standard desktop system
running an Intel Core2 Duo E4500 processor running at 2.20GHz, with 2Gb of
400MHz system memory and an 800MHz Front Side Bus. The motherboard is an MSI
model with an nVidia nForce 650i SLI SPP chipset and an nForce 650i SLI MCP
Southbridge. The hard disk was a standard Maxtor 80GB STM380815AS model.
There were three nVidia GeForce 7100 GS graphics adapters installed in three
of the seven PCI slots. The 7100 GS cards each have one analogue VGA port and
one digital DVI port, so we could connect six LCD panels to the system. We used
four of the six USB ports at the rear of the system and another two from a PCI
card with two USB ports and a single FireWire 400 port to connect to six Targus
USB hubs. A keyboard, mouse and USB to microphone/headphone minijack adapters
were plugged into the Targus hub, with headphone/microphone sets connected.
All users are given an account with 'limited' privileges, so they can run
but not install applications. They can also look at system properties, but the
ability to change them is stopped through 'greyed out' sections. Only the system
administrator can change system properties or install applications.
Once SoftXpand was installed and the six accounts created, we could fire up
the system and log into each account. Windows XP Professional Service Pack 2 was
running on the system, and initially the only application installed was
Microsoft Office Professional Edition 2003.
Running six Word sessions did not overly trouble processor utilisation, and
browsing web pages did not pose problems, although the main bottleneck would be
the network connection.
The interesting point about MiniFrame is that, whenever a bottleneck is
encountered, whether network, graphics, processor or disk related, upgrades
could be put in to partially or totally fix the problem.
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