Citrix Workspace 2005



  1. Citrix Workspace 2005 Download
  2. Citrix Workspace 2005 For Mac
  3. Citrix Workspace App 2005 For Windows
  4. Citrix Workspace Version 2005 For Windows

Citrix Workspace provides secure access to virtual desktops, applications, and Information Technology (IT) services from various platforms and devices. This technology enables users to manage enterprise data, applications, and desktops through secure, centralized deployment to any user device. Citrix's product line spans three branches; Workspace, Networking and Analytics. The company once offered remote access products under the Xen brand until it underwent a major rebranding in May.

Citrix Workspace 2005 Download

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2005

Citrix Workspace 2005 For Mac

Citrix Workspace app can be installed by both a user and an administrator. Administrator privileges are required only when using pass-through authentication and Citrix Ready workspace hub with Citrix Workspace app for Windows. Citrix acquired Sequoia Software Corp. In 2001 and ExpertCity, a provider of remote desktop products, in 2003. This was followed by more than a dozen other acquisitions from 2005 to 2012, which allowed Citrix to expand into server and desktop virtualization, cloud computing, Infrastructure as a Service, and Software as a Service offerings.

Citrix Virtual Apps
Developer(s)Citrix
Stable release
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows
TypeApplication virtualization
LicenseProprietary
Websitewww.citrix.com/products/citrix-virtual-apps-and-desktops/

Citrix Virtual Apps (formerly WinFrame, MetaFrame, Presentation Server and XenApp) is application virtualizationsoftware produced by Citrix Systems that allows Windows applications to be accessed via individual devices from a shared server or cloud system.

Product overview[edit]

Citrix Virtual Apps is application virtualization software that delivers centrally-hosted Windows applications to local devices without the necessity of installing them.[1] It is the flagship product for Citrix and was formerly known under the names WinFrame, MetaFrame, and Presentation Server.[2]

Citrix

Citrix Virtual Apps software uses FlexCast Management Architecture (FMA), a proprietary architecture for Citrix virtualization products.[2] It delivers individual applications, as opposed to entire desktops, to devices.[3] It is also used with Citrix Workspace to deliver apps as part of a complete virtual desktop environment.[4]

With Citrix Virtual Apps, Windows applications can be used on devices that typically could not run them, including Macintosh computers, mobile devices, GoogleChromebooks, and Linux computers.[5][6] Conversely, it enables otherwise incompatible apps to run on Windows desktops.[7]

Citrix Virtual Apps is accessed on all devices via Citrix Receiver.[5] The software can be delivered from on-premises data centers[6] or public, private, or hybrid clouds.[3][4]

History[edit]

The precursor to Virtual Apps was called WinFrame, a multi-useroperating system based on Windows NT 3.51.[8] Released in 1995, WinFrame was one of the first products distributed by Citrix.[2] At this stage of the product development Citrix Systems licensed the Windows NT 3.51 base operating system from Microsoft. The core development that Citrix delivered was the MultiWin engine. This allowed multiple users to logon and execute applications on a WinFrame server. Citrix was to later license the MultiWin technology to Microsoft, forming the basis of Microsoft's Terminal Services.

Repackaged versions of Windows 95, with Citrix WinFrame Client included, were also available from Citrix.

MetaFrame superseded WinFrame in 1998. The product was renamed several times: it became MetaFrame XP in 2002, MetaFrame XP Presentation Server in 2003, and then was rebranded as Presentation Server in 2005.[2] Each of these products focused on remote access of applications and server-based computing.[8]

In 2008, the product was renamed XenApp. The 'Xen' was taken from the company's acquisition of XenSource in 2007.[1]

Citrix Workspace App 2005 For Windows

Between 2010 and 2012, Citrix issued two updates of XenApp. XenApp 6 launched in 2010 and included a new central management console called AppCenter.[9] In 2012, XenApp 6.5 was released and this update included a new feature called Instant App Access, which aimed to reduce application launch time.[7]

In 2013, version 7.0 was released.[3] This update combined XenDesktop and XenApp into one application called XenDesktop under the Flex Management Architecture (FMA).[3] Prior to this, all versions of XenApp used the company's Independent Management Architecture (IMA).[2] In 2014, version 7.5 was released as XenApp, separate from XenDesktop, but it was also built on FMA.[2][3]

In 2018, XenApp was rebranded Citrix Virtual Apps.[10]

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abJoe Brodkin (25 August 2008). 'Citrix puts virtualization spin on flagship application delivery software'. Network World. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  2. ^ abcdefGreg Shields (4 April 2014). 'Citrix Products Evolve, but Name Changes Obscure Unification'. Redmond magazine. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  3. ^ abcdeAlyssa Wood (27 January 2014). 'XenApp 7.5 dodges desktops with app delivery to mobile devices, cloud'. TechTarget. Archived from the original on 20 August 2015. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  4. ^ abLarry Dignan (28 January 2014). 'Citrix latest XenDesktop, XenApp plug into Amazon Web Services, CloudStack'. ZDNet. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
  5. ^ abJoe Brodkin (12 August 2011). 'Google Chromebooks now run Windows through Citrix Receiver'. Network World. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  6. ^ abJack Madden (November 2011). 'Citrix XenApp definition'. TechTarget. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  7. ^ abFrank Ohlhorst (8 November 2012). 'Citrix XenApp 6.5: Eight exciting enhancements'. TechTarget. Archived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  8. ^ abPaul Stansel (19 October 2005). 'Citrix Access Suite 4.0 – It's Not Your Daddy's MetaFrame'. VirtualizationAdmin.com. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
  9. ^Mikael Ricknäs (10 March 2010). 'XenApp 6 centralizes management, adds Android and Mac support'. InfoWorld. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  10. ^Foley, Mary Jo. 'More details emerge on Citrix's plans for Microsoft's Windows Virtual Desktop'. ZDNet. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
Citrix Workspace 2005

Citrix Workspace Version 2005 For Windows

2005
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