Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) is a strategic choice for many enterprises in terms of digital transformation. By leveraging VDI to eliminate reliance on hardware devices, the desktops, applications, and data running on PCs can be centralized and migrated to servers in data centers. This not only solves the challenges of unified startup management of desktops and data security but also provides users with the flexibility and accessibility of desktops required for work, allowing access anytime and anywhere.
However, enterprises also face the following challenges when adopting VDI to achieve goals such as digital office, secure R&D, and data protection:
Resource Isolation
VDI is isolated from other businesses in terms of IT infrastructure resources, requiring independent planning, procurement, deployment, and O&M. This leads to resource silos and increases the complexity of architecture management.
Resource Waste
During idle time, VDI-specific compute resources, such as GPUs, CPUs, and memory, cannot be efficiently utilized, resulting in lower average resource utilization.
Complex O&M
VDI and other business clusters require separate O&M, expansion, upgrade, monitoring, alerting, and problem handling with different tool platforms and teams, making it difficult to improve O&M efficiency.