Windows Thin PC Details Revealed
        
        
        
        		A Microsoft representative noted late last week that the company  is planning two new options for IT organizations using Windows 7, but the  catch is that Software Assurance (SA) licensing needs to be in place.
One of the additions will be thin-client virtual desktop  infrastructure (VDI) technology for Windows 7 that Microsoft plans to roll out in  the first quarter of this year. The company also is planning a new way for IT  pros to manage BitLocker disk encryption, a feature available to users of the Windows  7 Enterprise or Ultimate editions.
The BitLocker management capability will be called "Microsoft  BitLocker Administration and Monitoring." MBAM, as its known, will be  designed to "help simplify BitLocker provisioning and deployment,"  according to Gavriella Schuster, general manager for Windows commercial  business, in a  blog post. Windows 7 customers with access to the Microsoft Desktop  Optimization Pack, a benefit of SA licensing, will be able to use MBAM. 
Microsoft plans to roll out an MBAM beta in March through  its Microsoft Connect portal, and those interested can sign up to be notified here (requires a Windows  Live ID).
The upcoming thin-client VDI technology is called  "Windows Thin PC," or "WinTPC," according to Schuster. She described  WinTPC as "a smaller footprint, locked down version of Windows 7, designed  to allow customers to repurpose their existing PCs as thin clients." 
Microsoft already sweetened the deal somewhat for SA licensees back  in July, when it extended VDI use rights as part of SA licensing benefits.  At the same time, Microsoft also announced a Windows Virtual Desktop Access (VDA)  subscription for those using thin-client devices. The VDA license is an extra  cost because the use of thin clients for VDI deployments isn't included as a  benefit of SA licensing.
Schuster clarified that future users of WinTPC technology  won't have to buy a VDA license: "PCs with WinTPC will not require the VDA  license that regular thin clients will need to access VDI desktops," she explained  in the blog.
Veteran Microsoft watcher Mary-Jo Foley received  an update from Microsoft indicating that a public beta of WinTPC will be  released via the Microsoft Connect portal. However, no release date for the  beta was indicated. 
Microsoft also provided Foley with some clarifications about  the confusing licensing details and explained that WinTPC follows in the  tradition of Microsoft's Windows Fundamentals for Legacy PCs (WinFLP), which is  a thin-client OS said to be based on Windows XP Embedded that's offered  through SA licensing.
 "WinTPC is the next revision  to WinFLP," a Microsoft spokesperson explained. "WinFLP is based on  the Windows XP SP3 platform, whereas WinTPC is based on the Windows 7 platform.  However, WinTPC is not related to VECD. Windows Vista Enterprise Centralized  Desktop (VECD) is very different from WinTPC. VECD was a software license that  enabled licensed devices to access a Windows VDI desktop. WinTPC is a Software  Assurance benefit and a locked down, smaller footprint version of the Windows 7  OS that is designed to help repurpose PCs as thin clients."
  Microsoft did announce last week that Service Pack 1 (SP1) for  Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 were released  to manufacturers. SP1 contains cumulative updates for Windows 7, but not  much more. However, a  Windows blog did indicate that the service pack "includes client-side  support for RemoteFX and Dynamic Memory which are two new virtualization  features enabled in Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1."
RemoteFX technology will enable thin clients to remotely  access graphics-intensive applications using Remote Desktop Services and  Windows 7 desktop virtualization on thin-client devices. However, whether or  not users licensed to use RemoteFX technology will need WinTPC technology or licensing  wasn't made clear in Schuster's brief comments. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.