Get down to business while cutting your computing costs

Today, just about every single business office depends on PCs. And getting the job done depends on unfettered access to word processing, spreadsheets, email, enterprise and web applications, and the Internet. But the costs for access add up fast—especially when you consider total costs of ownership over time. That’s where NComputing comes in. NComputing's economical virtual desktops help companies big and small stretch their computing dollars. That’s why more than 750,000 NComputing seats have been deployed by 15,000 organizations in 70 countries.

Where are NComputing virtual desktops making an impact?

  • Central offices
  • Remote and branch offices
  • Back-office operations
  • Call centers

Here’s what NComputing can do for your company

  • Cut PC acquisition costs by 60%
  • Dramatically reduce IT complexity
  • Lower electrical consumption by 90%
  • Increase security from viruses and malware

How does it work?

The NComputing solution is based on a simple fact: today’s PCs are so powerful that the vast majority of applications use only a small fraction of the computer’s capacity. NComputing’s virtualization software and hardware tap this unused capacity so that it can be simultaneously shared by multiple users, spreading out the cost of the PC, and typically providing four times the number of seats for the same money. Each person has their own keyboard, screen, settings, applications, and data files—just as if they were working at an independent machine. What a novel business concept: more computers for less money.

One of our two product lines is probably ideal for your office. The X-series is ideal for workgroup clusters—like smaller offices— where all of the users are located close to the shared PC. It also is the most economical solution. The L-series connect with standard Ethernet networks, so proximity to the shared PC doesn’t matter.

Getting started

NComputing customers have established a predictable and repeatable formula for success that you can follow, too. Start with a small test to see how well it works with your software. Then do a limited rollout so you can see how much the users like it over their old PCs. Then it usually becomes a question of when to roll out the solution throughout your organization, not whether to.

Next steps