Many of you were asking for some online demos of Thinfinity VirtualUI. We've just finished setting up two applications for you to try. The first one is the famous "Fish Facts" in two flavors, basic UI virtualization and browser and web resources integration. The second one is a nice open source .NET application that allows you to manage your personal finances.


Many of you were asking for some online demos of Thinfinity VirtualUI. We've just finished setting up two applications for you to try. The first one is the famous "Fish Facts" in two flavors, basic UI virtualization and   browser and web resources integration. The second one is a nice open source .NET application that allows you to manage your personal finances. 

To see the demos you have to go to the VirtualUI's web page in our web site: http://www.cybelesoft.com/thinfinity/virtualui/ 

I would appreciate very much your feedback, specially regarding the performance.

Comments

  1. Gustavo Ricardi Neat, PDF might be plenty sufficient for most of our clients. Currently we're having quite a bit of issues with printing via published app, it mostly works but is horribly slow "discovering" the local printer.

    Anyway, thanks for the feedback, looks like something we definitely should evaluate more closely. Just to be sure I understood it correctly, the server will launch multiple instances of our application under one user account (so no per-seat or similar Windows account is needed), and is the per-user price per year?

    In the meantime, would it be possible to use gif or png for the combo dropdowns and similar elements? The Gibbs phenomenon is quite jarring in the demos.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Asbjørn Heid VirtualUI needs 1 interactive session, either a console or a RDP session. In that 1 session you can launch n instances with either 1 user or each one with its own windows user. The price is per-concurrent-user permanent, plus optional annual maintenance. There is no a limitation on what to use, except DirectX (just for a while).

    ReplyDelete
  3. Gustavo Ricardi Thank you for your prompt reply. That sounds great, those Windows licenses do add up quickly.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment