Friend's company gets article about big software project
Posted: 2005-04-19 02:59pm
A friend of mine brainstorms and creates software for a company called TriCerat, which just got a big spread in the magazine "Network World Fusion." What I understand of this software is that it enables a system administrator to keep track of what goes on in that network of computers, which is apparently useful for fixing problems on the computers in the network. From what I understand, it logs every single function each computer in the admin's network to make identifying problems easier, as well as spying on what those employees are doing on those computers? Seems like it'd be good for that too.
I don't think any of you will have a need for this because it's designed for businesses, but I figured it couldn't hurt to get the name of the company out. Plus I want to understand as much about this software as possible, so I thought a discussion about what it does could help that. If y'all find this interesting, that is.
I'm probably totally off-base here, but is printing without a driver kind of like Bluetooth technology?
I don't think any of you will have a need for this because it's designed for businesses, but I figured it couldn't hurt to get the name of the company out. Plus I want to understand as much about this software as possible, so I thought a discussion about what it does could help that. If y'all find this interesting, that is.
Link.Software tames thin-client setups
By John Fontana
Network World, 04/18/05
TriCerat last week released a suite of tools designed to help users manage their server-based computing deployments.
The company's Simplify Suite is a collection of four tools for managing user profiles, locking down privileges, managing resources such as memory and CPU usage, and supporting printing features regardless of installed drivers. The tools, which are available through a single administrative console, load on to a Windows 2000 or 2003 server that is supporting server-based computing and thin clients either through Windows Terminal Services or Citrix MetaFrame.
"This is what administrators want," says Bill Heldman, an analyst with Enterprise Management Associates. "If administrators can deploy high-quality application virtualization they would adopt [server-based computing] more quickly."
He says TriCerat, along with competitors such as AppSense, RTO Software and Aurema, are rounding the rough edges users find when they deploy server-based computing, especially in the area of printing.
"Printing issues are a huge turnoff," Heldman says. "If I have to support telecommuters and they can't print, companies say they are not going to do that."
Simplify Printing, which incorporates TriCerat's TriMeta driverless printing technology, allows end users to print from any applications, regardless of the drivers installed on their machines. Typically, administrators have to configure printing on a user-by-user basis and ensure that the drivers on the server-based system match those on the end-user desktop. Simplify Printing configures all the printing capabilities on the fly when the user connects to the application.
The suite also contains a tool called Simplify Lockdown that allows administrators to limit privileges of end users such as running unauthorized applications, tools or scripts.
The limitations, which can be applied at various levels including IP address, machines names, domain or user group, and not only determine what an end user can do but what end users see on their screens.
"The moment you install these tools, the only thing users have is access to log off. Administrators have to build up from there," says John Byrne, president and CEO of TriCerat.
The final two tools in the suite are Simplify Profiles and Simplify Resources . Simplify Profiles lets administrators push user profiles down to a desktop each time an end user logs on. The profiles control the entire end user session, including registry key settings and names of drives. The Simplify Resources tool controls the way Windows allocates CPU and memory to ensure no one application can cripple the performance of the server it is running on.
The Simplify Suite is priced at $3,000 per server.
I'm probably totally off-base here, but is printing without a driver kind of like Bluetooth technology?