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The Citrix Blog
Blogs for tag 'multimedia virtualization'

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posted by Derek Thorslund

XenDesktop 3 Feature Pack 1 is now available for download, and with it, a Trial Release of HDX MediaStream for Flash. The trial release (downloadable here) also supports XenApp on Windows Server 2003 and 2008.

Try it out! Here are some cool websites that highlight the superior performance of this new technology:

Enjoy!

Derek Thorslund
Product Strategist, HDX Multimedia Virtualization

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posted by Derek Thorslund

The Apollo team is busy developing several new technologies for multimedia virtualization. Details of the upcoming Tech Preview release of Apollo Accelerated Bitmap Remoting have now been posted on the Citrix.com web site. This technology expands Citrix's capabilities for high-end professional graphics and 3D medical imaging beyond OpenGL. This video demonstrates Accelerated Bitmap Remoting delivering Autodesk Inventor, Autodesk Revit Architecture and Google Earth over ICA, leveraging the graphics processor on a Windows Vista host.

Derek Thorslund
Product Strategist, Multimedia Virtualization

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posted by Derek Thorslund

A key part of my job as Product Strategist for Multimedia Virtualization is to stay tuned in with the evolving needs of our customers for graphics and multimedia technologies. Citrix has many different ways of collecting such market input, and your comments on my blog posts are one source that I particularly appreciate. Another highly valuable source of input is the Citrix Customer Advisory Community, a global group of customers who provide their perspectives and opinions in an online community forum. What are they saying about their needs around graphics and video?

The technology referred to most frequently in a recent dialogue with the Citrix Customer Advisory Community was streaming video. At least a third of respondents specifically mentioned Adobe Flash. Obviously - and this was no surprise - Flash has been widely adopted in the enterprise for employee training and corporate communications. And Flash content has become prevalent on the Web. Many Citrix customers are publishing a web browser or a complete Windows desktop to their users, so Flash support is becoming increasingly important to them. As I noted in my blog post Secrets for Optimizing Flash Performance - Part 2, significant improvements to Flash support were introduced in XenApp 4.5. And there's more to come. One of the priorities of the Citrix Multimedia Virtualization Initiative is to adapt our RAVE (Remote Audio and Video Extensions) technology to further optimize the delivery of Flash videos and animations while dramatically increasing server scalability. We are also looking ahead to Silverlight, an important new technology from Microsoft.

A wide variety of graphics-intensive applications were named by the Advisory Community. Several were OpenGL applications like Dassault CATIA, which will be well handled by Citrix's new Virtual Design Studio product based on our Pictor technology. Others were DirectX based applications such as Autodesk AutoCAD/Inventor and Bentley MicroStation, for which our new Apollo accelerated bitmap remoting technology will be very well suited. Customers in the Healthcare space mentioned 3D echocardiograms and high contrast CT scans that generate large graphics models requiring hardware acceleration, again a great opportunity for Apollo technology.

Customers running 2D and lightweight 3D graphics applications commented on the excellent graphics performance of XenApp Presentation Server 4.5, thanks to the new SpeedScreen Progressive Display technology. Applications mentioned included SolidWorks eDrawings, Intergraph PDS and SmartPlant, AutoCAD Map 3D and ESRI ArcGIS. SpeedScreen Progressive Display is truly a needle-mover for the vast majority of graphics applications being used by our customers today.

Some customers are using client-side application virtualization (also known as "application streaming") to deliver graphics applications. They get the benefits of centralized management and application isolation while fully leveraging the capabilities of the user's PC.

Tickers that scroll horizontally were mentioned a couple of times. Today's SuperCaching algorithm is optimized for vertical scrolling, but we've been doing some research into an enhanced algorithm that will accommodate scrolling in any direction. It will be interesting to test out the new algorithm with applications like on-screen "readerboards" that display text in this way.

What are your priorities for multimedia virtualization, including graphics, streaming media and real-time communications? What experience have you had delivering graphics applications with SpeedScreen Progressive Display? What are your plans for adopting unified communications, voice chat or desktop video conferencing ? I look forward to your comments!

Derek Thorslund
Product Strategist, Multimedia Virtualization

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posted by Derek Thorslund

AutoCAD Map 3D, first introduced in the mid 1990s, has become the leading engineering platform for creating and managing geospatial information, bringing together the CAD and GIS worlds so that spatial data can easily be integrated with design drawings. The software is widely used by utilities, government agencies and industries dealing with natural resources.

Citrix and Autodesk have just completed extensive verification and field testing using XenApp Presentation Server 4.5 to provide on-demand access to AutoCAD Map 3D 2009, which has now been validated as Citrix Ready. This is a great example of how Citrix multimedia virtualization technologies such as SpeedScreen Progressive Display and SpeedScreen Image Acceleration optimize the ICA protocol to provide an excellent user experience with graphical applications while increasing security and dramatically reducing management and workstation costs.

To learn more about the Citrix and Autodesk partnership and this solution, check out today's press release and this new web site: http://www.citrixandautodesk.com/.

Derek Thorslund
Product Strategist, Multimedia Virtualization

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posted by Derek Thorslund

As more and more people experience the recent beta release of XenDesktop, the value of Citrix's ICA protocol in delivering graphics is getting a lot of notice. ICA is shining in environments where network latency puts other protocols to shame.

Here are a couple of recent video blog posts that capture the performance advantages of ICA for graphical content. The first video (click here to view) shows the simple and common task of dragging an image across the screen, as you might do when editing a PowerPoint. The second video (click here to view) shows a CAD viewing and publishing application, eDrawings from SolidWorks. These are good examples of how ICA technologies such as SpeedScreen Image Acceleration and SpeedScreen Progressive Display optimize the user experience.

Derek Thorslund
Product Strategist, Multimedia Virtualization

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posted by Derek Thorslund

It's great to see the major desktop appliance (thin client) vendors, including HP/Neoware and Wyse, rallying around the Citrix Multimedia Virtualization Initiative. A notable example of how our ecosystem partners add value is TCX Multimedia 2.0 from Wyse, a streaming media solution (think training videos and corporate broadcasts accessed in an ICA session). At iForum 07 - The App Delivery Expo - Wyse and Citrix announced that TCX Multimedia 2.0 has achieved Citrix Ready status (see the press release from Wyse).

TCX Multimedia provides an intriguing complement to SpeedScreen Multimedia Acceleration (one of several technologies explained in Brian Madden's video on SpeedScreen). As with SpeedScreen Multimedia Acceleration, the media player runs on Presentation Server but the multimedia (video and audio) data stream is decoded and played locally on the client with a virtual channel being used for start/pause/stop and other controls. And both technologies deliver a great user experience by leveraging the processing power of the client device while maintaining the advantages of a centralized application delivery model. The key difference with TCX Multimedia is that the multimedia stream can be delivered directly to the user desktop appliance from a local media server instead of going through the data center. TCX Multimedia attempts to establish a direct path from the source to the client. This isn't always possible and the solution will fall back to obtaining the media stream through ICA when necessary to traverse firewalls, but when it is possible it has the benefit of consuming less network bandwidth and reducing the load on Presentation Server, which is good for performance and scalability (number of concurrent users per server). The beauty of the TCX Multimedia software is that it can intelligently and dynamically decide when to redirect the multimedia stream.

Another noteworthy feature of TCX Multimedia is its multicast support (limited to MPEG-1). Multicast provides a very efficient way of delivering the same multimedia stream to many users at the same time. Suppose your CEO is addressing the troops for a quarterly state-of-the-business update. Potentially a large number of people want to watch the videocast simultaneously, in real time. With multicasting, each individual packet can be sent to many endpoints simultaneously, consuming much less network bandwidth than if the media stream had to be replicated for every user. And multicast uses UDP/RTP. UDP (User Datagram Protocol) is better suited to live videocasts than TCP/IP because it is a "best efforts" protocol that doesn't get stuck doing retransmissions if some packets are lost; timeliness is more important than completeness. RTP (Real-Time Protocol) adds timestamps and other controls to help keep the audio and video in sync.

TCX Multimedia supports a broad set of media formats: MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4 part 2, WMV (Windows Media Video), WMA (Windows Media Audio), AC-3 (Dolby Digital) and MP3. The notable omission at this time is Adobe Flash.

What next? Wyse notes that support for Linux is "coming soon".

Derek Thorslund
Product Strategist, Multimedia Virtualization

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posted by Derek Thorslund

In this 5-minute video, Citrix architect Lee Laborczfalvi demonstrates technology from project Pictor, a key component of the Citrix Multimedia Virtualization Initiative. Pictor leverages high performance GPU hardware to accelerate interactive 3D graphics applications built on OpenGL, a widely used graphics API that offers a broad set of rendering, texture mapping, special effects and other powerful visualization functions. OpenGL is commonly used by CAD/CAM/CAE, GIS (geographic information), medical imaging and data visualization applications. Click here for a video demonstration of Pictor from the Tech Lab at iForum 07 - The App Delivery Expo.

Up until December 14, 2007, Citrix is recruiting select customers and partners who use Dassault CATIA to participate in a 2-day Design Council for Pictor. Participants will preview and test early Pictor technology at the Citrix office in Santa Clara, California, interact directly with the Citrix Pictor team, provide feedback and influence the future direction of the solution. For further information, please contact Citrix Product Manager Debbie Fox (Deborah.Fox@Citrix.com) or Product Marketing Manager Michael Chang (Michael.Chang2@Citrix.com).

Derek Thorslund
Product Strategist, Multimedia Virtualization

(Click to watch Lee demonstrate the Pictor technology -- and stay tuned for a bonus feature at the end)

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posted by Derek Thorslund

One of the most exciting demos at iForum 07 - The App Delivery Expo - was the project Apollo demo by Henry Gancedo to Mark Templeton and the audience at the closing keynote. Click here to view a 6-minute video of the Apollo demo in which Henry gives us a preview of technology for delivering a Vista Aero desktop - complete with translucent "glass" effects, Flip 3D animation and a highly graphical WPF application - to a non-Vista desktop appliance. (http://www.brightcove.tv/title.jsp?title=1279697348)

Derek Thorslund
Product Strategist, Multimedia Virtualization

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posted by Derek Thorslund

The Citrix Multimedia Virtualization Initiative is an ongoing cross-product R&D effort focused on multimedia desktop and application delivery. Watch my video blog for a 6-minute introduction to the Multimedia Virtualization Initiative and learn how Citrix is continuing to enhance the ICA protocol to provide the best end-user experience as graphics and rich media technologies evolve.

My video blog references Microsoft Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) technology and a fast-paced video that will give you a great appreciation for what WPF applications are all about. You can find Microsoft's WPF video at http://wpf.netfx3.com/blogs/news_and_announcements/archive/2007/05/10/wpf-momentum-video.aspx.

Derek Thorslund
Product Strategist, Multimedia Virtualization

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