News
Citrix Touts Microsoft Support at Partner Event
- By Jeffrey Schwartz
- January 13, 2016
Citrix, a company in the midst of a significant restructuring effort, signaled a return to its roots during this week's Citrix Summit partner conference in Las Vegas.
The company announced its acquisition of Comtrade System Software and Tools management packs for Microsoft's System Center Operations Manager (SCOM). The acquisition covers just the technology IP of SCOM management packs for Citrix-specific environments. Comtrade, a provider of various management and monitoring tools, is a longtime Citrix partner and its SCOM management packs cover XenDesktop, XenApp, XenMobile and NetScaler. (Ed.'s note: An earlier version of this article said Citrix had acquired the entire company. However, the deal covers just the Citrix management pack technology.)
The announcements indicate a return to Citrix's bread-and-butter business of managing desktops and apps in virtual environments. They come on the heels of a string of restructuring moves, including last year's divestment of its "GoTo" services and this week's sale of its CloudPlatform and CloudPortal Business Manager products to Accelerite.
Comtrade provides a SCOM management pack that lets administrators manage Citrix XenDesktop, XenApp and Workspace Suite environments, explained Calvin Hsu, Citrix's vice president of product marketing for Windows App Delivery.
"They provide an end-to-end monitoring solution, specifically with Citrix," Hsu said. "It's already installed and working with hundreds of customers. They are already part of our ecosystem and it integrates with System Center Operations Manager. It's provides a more comprehensive end-to-end user experience, monitoring and a number of licensing and provisioning and storefront components."
Hsu also pointed to Citrix's release of XenApp and XenDesktop 7.7, which the company quietly made available last month and delivers integration with Skype for Business.
"We are seeing huge amounts of interest in being able to use Skype for Business from a virtual desktop or virtual hosted application like XenApp because people are creating these mobile workspaces where they want not only their application, but also all of their telephony and videoconferencing and all of that stuff to follow around with them," Hsu said. "It was developed in very close collaboration with Microsoft as they were building out and introducing their new Skype architecture. We were in lockstep with them for that."
The Skype for Business functionality works on Windows, Macintosh and Linux desktops, Hsu said.
Citrix also started talking about the next releases of XenApp and XenDesktop. The 7.8 versions, due out later this quarter, will offer AppDisk, app layering tech that lets IT pros package and manage apps separate from the master operating system image, Hsu said. The forthcoming release will also offer management of Microsoft AppV packages, as well as improved app publishing and graphics performance.
Also at the Citrix Summit, the company announced a new long-term service branch offering, providing extended support for older products. Hsu said it's for shops that don't want to upgrade but want ongoing support for retired products.
About the Author
Jeffrey Schwartz is editor of Redmond magazine and also covers cloud computing for Virtualization Review's Cloud Report. In addition, he writes the Channeling the Cloud column for Redmond Channel Partner. Follow him on Twitter @JeffreySchwartz.