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Guess what….you can now officially stop blaming storage as the most expensive part of a VDI deployment. Gunnar Berger (@gunnarwb) with Gartner sent out a provocative tweet that grabbed my attention: He followed that tweet up with a blog post that gave some detail: The Real Cost of VDI Storage . In it he referenced that Citrix had recently created a Citrix Ready VDI Capacity Validation Program for Storage Partners and invited some storage vendors to participate in a 750 seat, Citrix PVS test. The crux of the exercise was Citrix created a test environment and invited each storage vendor to show up with their storage array, plug it in and run the test. In my opinion, the I can honestly say that the way I architected storage solutions just a few short years ago (read:Quick VDI Sizing HowTo) is very different than I would do today. In fact, back then it was a little easier because it was math (drive IOPS and Desktop IOPS), and it was pretty clear what array to use. The answer to everything back then was to “throw more spindles at it until it stops complaining”. As you can imagine, that wasn’t a cheap way of sizing or fixing things. Today, if it’s less than 1000 desktops you can look at things like VMware vSAN, EMC ScaleIO or any other software based storage solution. If you need to scale between 500 desktops and 2000 then a Hybrid Approach (SSD/SAS/NLSAS) makes more sense. If you need to scale beyond 2000+ desktops then All Flash Arrays makes a ton of sense. Keep in mind, there is probably a solution to match just about any budget and design criteria you may have. As you scale up your requirements, economies of scale kick in and “costs per desktop” drop like a hammer. In fact, if you look at the Citrix designs some of the storage vendors call out how many desktops their configuration can scale, based on the tested system. The net result of this is we can FINALLY put to bed this notion that the storage purchases are the #1 reason VDI Budgets get blown up. 4 years ago, storage companies wore that “honor” like a scarlet letter, but with the advent of Software-Based storage, Hybrid Arrays and All Flash Arrays this is no longer the case. Now the biggest expense is typically the Virtual Desktop License or the server infrastructure needed to drive the number of desktops. Either way, 2014 is the year for VDI @vTexan
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