Virtual Desktop Infrastructure Powerpoint Presentation Slides
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End-user computing EUC is a term that describes computer systems and platforms assisting non-programmers in developing applications. Here is a readymade, competently designed template on Virtual Desktop Infrastructure, which is a great tool to talk about the problems faced by companies in end-user computing. It also sheds some light on the implementation of End User Computing to eliminate the issues faced. In this proposal, we have covered the companys current scenario by describing the current situation and problems encountered, explaining the reason for a company to spend in EUC. In addition, the template contains the benefits of EUC to the business, characteristics associated with EUC, and various existing and emerging types of end-user computing. Furthermore, this Virtual Desktop Infrastructure template includes potential EUC risks and the ways to control them. It also talks about the implementation of EUC in the company and the management post-implementation. Moreover, the proposal caters to a training program, a RACI matrix, application of EUC in different sectors, budget planning for EUC implementation, and 30-60-90 days plan for EUC. Lastly, it includes a dashboard for tracking downloads, impacts of EUC on the company, and introduction to end-user computing. Download our 100 percent editable template now.
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Content of this Powerpoint Presentation
Slide 1: This slide introduces Virtual Desktop Infrastructure. State Your Company Name and begin.
Slide 2: This slide states Agenda of the presentation.
Slide 3: This slide presents Table of Content for the presentation.
Slide 4: This slide shows title for two topics that are to be covered next in the template.
Slide 5: This slide describes the problems faced by the company that include the percentage of total spreadsheets, etc.
Slide 6: This slide explains the current situation of the company and it includes the factors such as productivity anywhere, device preferences, etc.
Slide 7: This slide depicts title for next two topics to be covered in the template.
Slide 8: This slide describes the reasons why end-user computing is important for business and it includes slow virtual desktop solutions.
Slide 9: This slide represents the global end user computing market size by sector such as IT and Telecom, banking, etc.
Slide 10: This slide highlights title for next two topics to be covered.
Slide 11: This slide depicts the benefits of the end user computing to business and it includes centralized management, BYOD support, etc.
Slide 12: This slide represents the characteristics associated with EUC based on factors such as cost, schedule, size, control, etc.
Slide 13: This slide illustrates title for next three topics to be covered in the template.
Slide 14: This slide represents the types of end user computing and it includes traditional end user computing, end user control and end user development.
Slide 15: This slide depicts the three emerging types of end user computing such as chat bots, analytics and artificial intelligence.
Slide 16: This slide represents the end user computing services that includes service desk support, messaging & collaboration services, etc.
Slide 17: This slide displays title for next two topics to be covered in the template.
Slide 18: This slide depicts the challenges of end user computing and it includes time sharing, enter virtualization, enter PC, etc.
Slide 19: This slide represents the controlling the potential risks of end user computing by establishing and evaluating company’s end user.
Slide 20: This slide presents title for next eight topics to be covered.
Slide 21: This slide explains the checklist for an effective end user computing environment in the organization.
Slide 22: This slide represents the essential components for complete end-user computing environment.
Slide 23: This slide depicts the meaning of virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) and how it helps to lower the company expenditure.
Slide 24: This slide represents the working of virtual desktop infrastructure and how connection is established.
Slide 25: This slide depicts the training program for end users in the organization.
Slide 26: This slide depicts how workspace will work after EUC deployment in the company and how users will be able to access corporate information.
Slide 27: This slide exhibits title for next three topics to be covered in the template.
Slide 28: This slide represents how we will manage to end user computing and it includes to adopt centralized application deployment, etc.
Slide 29: This slide depicts the end user management model and it is divided into three parts such as organization and individual, context and outcomes.
Slide 30: This slide represents the RACI matrix for end user computing management and it shows the tasks performed by each manager.
Slide 31: This slide shows title for next five topics to be covered.
Slide 32: This slide depicts the application of end user computing in banking sector.
Slide 33: This slide represents the end user computing in insurance world.
Slide 34: This slide explains the use of end user computing in financial institutions.
Slide 35: This slide depicts the application of end user computing in healthcare sector.
Slide 36: This slide explains the use cases of end user computing in manufacturing.
Slide 37: This slide depicts title for next topic to be covered in the template.
Slide 38: This slide explains about the budget for end user computing implementation by covering details of investments.
Slide 39: This slide highlights title for next topic to be covered.
Slide 40: This slide explains the 30-60-90 days plan for end user computing and it shows actions to be performed.
Slide 41: This slide displays title for next topic to be covered.
Slide 42: This slide depicts the roadmap for end user computing and tasks that would be performed at each interval of time.
Slide 43: This slide presents title for next topic to be covered.
Slide 44: This slide represents the dashboard for tracking downloads of apps in end user computing environment.
Slide 45: This slide exhibits title for next two topics to be covered in the template.
Slide 46: This slide represents the impacts of end user computing across the company and it includes mobility, OS migration, etc.
Slide 47: This slide depicts the effects of end user computing on the business post implementation by covering details of workforce productivity, etc.
Slide 48: This slide presents title for additional slides.
Slide 49: This slide represents the meaning of end user computing and how users from anywhere can access apps and data through end user computing.
Slide 50: This slide represents who are the end-users and how they develop applications through EUC applications made by skilled experts in the database.
Slide 51: This slide defines the categories of end users in DBMS such as casual end users, naïve or ignorant end users, etc.
Slide 52: This slide displays Icons for Virtual Desktop Infrastructure.
Slide 53: This is Our Team slide with names and designation.
Slide 54: This slide provides 30 60 90 Days Plan with text boxes.
Slide 55: This slide represents Stacked Column chart with two products comparison.
Slide 56: This slide depicts Venn diagram with text boxes.
Slide 57: This slide shows Post It Notes. Post your important notes here.
Slide 58: This slide showcases Roadmap for Process Flow.
Slide 59: This slide contains Puzzle with related icons and text.
Slide 60: This is a Comparison slide to state comparison between commodities, entities etc.
Slide 61: This is a Timeline slide. Show data related to time intervals here.
Slide 62: This slide contains Puzzle with related icons and text.
Slide 63: This is a Thank You slide with address, contact numbers and email address.
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FAQs for Virtual Desktop Infrastructure
So VDI's pretty solid for a few reasons. First off, managing everything from one spot makes IT way less of a headache - trust me on this one. Security's better too since your data never leaves the datacenter. Users can jump on their desktop from basically anywhere, which is perfect now that everyone's working from home or coffee shops or whatever. Long-term you'll actually save cash because thin clients are way cheaper than buying full PCs for everyone. Oh, and start with whoever needs remote access most - they make the best test group.
So basically VDI keeps all your sensitive stuff locked up in the data center instead of spread across everyone's laptops. Your users just see screen images - the actual data never touches their devices. If someone's laptop gets stolen? No big deal, there's nothing on it. You get way better control over security patches and can actually track who's doing what. Honestly, it's a game-changer if you've got compliance headaches or remote workers. I'd definitely look into it if you're dealing with any regulated data.
Honestly, the costs will hit you first - servers, storage, all that networking equipment plus licensing fees that just keep stacking up. Managing the whole setup gets pretty complex too, and your IT team might be scrambling to learn new skills. Users will definitely complain if apps run slower than their old desktops, especially anything graphics-heavy. Performance lag is like the kiss of death for user buy-in. Oh, and don't even get me started on bandwidth - you'll need way more than you think. I'd say start small with a pilot group first. Test everything thoroughly before rolling it out company-wide or you'll be dealing with angry employees all day.
VDI's pretty solid once you get it dialed in right. Yeah, there's gonna be some lag compared to your regular desktop - graphics stuff especially gets wonky. Most office apps run fine though, people adapt fast. The real game changer is being able to log in from anywhere with decent wifi. IT loves it too since they can spin up new desktops in like 5 minutes. Oh, and make sure your servers can actually handle everyone logging in at 9am - learned that one the hard way at my last job. Users get real cranky when their desktop takes forever to load.
Honestly, most companies are just moving their VDI stuff to the cloud now. AWS, Azure, Google Cloud - they all do virtual desktops and you can scale up or down without buying a ton of hardware upfront. Your people can log in from anywhere which is pretty sweet. The cloud guys handle all the boring maintenance and backup stuff too. Only downside is you need solid internet obviously. But yeah, if you're thinking about doing desktop virtualization, I'd definitely go cloud-hosted. Way less of a pain than managing your own servers.
Centralized management is your best bet - vSphere, Citrix Studio, or System Center all work great. The dashboards look like mission control at first (honestly kind of intimidating), but you'll get the hang of it. Watch your CPU, memory, and storage on the host servers. Login times matter too. Set up alerts for when things hit certain thresholds or connections start failing. Oh, and definitely establish your baseline metrics early so you actually know what normal performance looks like for your setup. Trust me, you don't want to be flying blind when users start complaining.
Yeah so VDI costs way more upfront - servers, licenses, all that infrastructure stuff adds up fast. But your ongoing expenses usually drop a lot after that initial hit. Thin clients last forever compared to regular PCs, and your IT folks aren't constantly fixing random desktop issues (which honestly saves your sanity too). The math really starts working once you hit like 200+ users. I'd definitely test it with a small group first though - see what your actual numbers look like before going all in. No point committing to something that might not work for your specific setup.
VDI works great for remote work because people can access their full desktop from any device - laptop, tablet, whatever. The cool part is all your company data stays locked up in the datacenter, so if someone's kid spills juice on their personal laptop, you're not screwed. Your employees get the exact same experience whether they're at Starbucks or their kitchen table. Nothing actually downloads to their device, which is huge for security. I'd say start small though - pick your most mobile users first and test it out with them. Once you see it working smoothly, it's pretty impressive stuff.
Honestly, VDI can be tricky but here's what you actually need. Your hypervisor is everything - VMware vSphere or Hyper-V handle the virtual desktops. Storage matters way more than people think, so go SSD or your users will complain constantly. Network's gotta be solid too with good bandwidth. You'll want broker software like Horizon or Citrix for managing who gets what. GPU acceleration isn't optional anymore unless it's just basic Office stuff. Oh, and map out what you've got first - no point buying everything at once. Start with your biggest bottleneck and work from there.
So VDI basically keeps all your sensitive stuff locked down in the data center instead of spread out on everyone's laptops. When someone quits or loses their device, you're not freaking out about data getting out there - which honestly saves so much stress. You can control who sees what, get automatic audit logs, and push security rules to everyone at once. Oh, and it works great for regulations like HIPAA or SOX since you can configure everything upfront. I'd start by figuring out which compliance rules hit your industry, then talk to your VDI vendor about setting up the right controls.
So desktop virtualization is basically like having a whole computer running somewhere else that you remote into - full OS and everything. Application virtualization is way different though. You're just streaming specific apps to your desktop without all that OS baggage. Way lighter on resources too. Honestly, desktop virtualization can be a bit of a resource hog since you're running an entire Windows environment. But if you only need certain apps? Go with app virtualization. Better performance, uses less bandwidth, and users won't complain about lag. I'd probably lean toward app virtualization unless you really need that full desktop experience.
Dude, storage and network will make or break your VDI setup. Fast storage is non-negotiable - SSDs or NVMe because you've got tons of virtual desktops hammering the same arrays. Network bandwidth? Don't cheap out. Everything feels like garbage when there's not enough pipe for all that desktop traffic flowing to users. I've watched deployments completely tank because someone underestimated IOPS requirements. Calculate what you need based on user count and workloads, then honestly just overbuild your network capacity. You'll thank yourself later when it actually works smoothly.
So for VDI stuff, VMware Horizon and Citrix are your main players - they dominate for good reason. Windows Virtual Desktop works great if you're already Microsoft everywhere. Hardware-wise, Dell or HPE servers are solid, though Nutanix does hyperconverged really well. Storage is where you can't cheap out - get fast SSDs or you'll hate life when users complain about lag. Actually had a client skimp on storage once and it was painful. Budget and existing vendor deals usually drive the hardware decision anyway. Figure out your user count first, then work backwards from there.
Track your hard costs first - hardware, energy, IT support hours. Way easier to measure. Then dig into the soft stuff like productivity gains from faster deployments and less downtime. Remote work can actually save you real estate money too, which is huge. The annoying part? Quantifying things like "users are happier" - but honestly that stuff adds up. My advice is set up your tracking before you deploy anything. Otherwise you're basically throwing darts at ROI numbers later. Security improvements matter too, just harder to put a price tag on until something bad doesn't happen.
So VDI's getting way more interesting with cloud setups and GPU virtualization for heavy workloads. Most companies are moving to DaaS models now - you can spin resources up or down instantly. The AI stuff for resource management is actually pretty solid, predicts usage patterns automatically. Zero-trust security is baked into desktop delivery now too. Remote work basically fast-tracked all this development by years (wild how that worked out). Definitely worth comparing your current VDI costs against cloud pricing - the models have totally shifted and you might be surprised.
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