Word 2013, FileZilla, CRM-Express, etc.) and web apps with single sign-on (e.g. Furthermore it’s important to understand that all Receivers provide access to Windows desktops (black icons in top left hand corner), Windows applications (e.g. You will notice that UI is consistent across native Receiver on Mac, Receiver for HTML5 and Receiver for Chrome and (indicated by the + on the left hand side) the workflow for subscribing to new resources is the very same on all platforms. Below you can find a screenshot of Citrix Receiver running natively on a Mac (top left), Receiver for Web (for HTML5 access) (top right) and Receiver for Chrome running on a HP Chromebook (bottom left). In the first step I’d like to compare the user interface, since that is also the first impression a user has. Both new versions from Citrix provide our customers with a set of features unparalleled in the industry.Īs part of this blog I’d like to focus on how they compare to the HTML5-based client (aka VMware Horizon Blast) of our competition. This blog post takes a close look at what people see when they log into Citrix Receiver on a Chromebook or through HTML 5 to access the newest version of XenApp and XenDesktop compared to what VMware Horizon View users see when they log into Horizon Blast.Īs part of the XenDesktop / XenApp 7.6 release, Citrix also introduced new versions of the generic clientless access mode Receiver for HTML5 and the Receiver for Chrome, along with some nice tools I’ll discuss as part of this blog.įor more information about the new and updated features of the two Receivers, please have a look at Vipin Borkar’s blogs here and here. But what about the people who will be using those solutions to complete their daily workload? Can employees work effectively with those other solutions?
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |