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NComputing on CNET
CNET
October 13, 2008
Redwood City start-up NComputing, whose technology uses the power
of a single PC to power up to seven computing terminals, is set
to announce on Monday that it has started the process of equipping
5,000 schools in India with its technology. NComputing will provide
about 50,000 students with access to the Internet as part of the
deal, which will use two PCs in each computer lab to power 10 terminals
at schools in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. The deal itself
is part of a $100 million effort that includes operating and powering
the lab for five years, as well as all the needed gear. NComputing's
chunk of that is about $2 million.
CEO Stephen Dukker said in an interview that his company is proving
that virtualization doesn't have to be technologically complex,
noting that of the more than 1 million seats his company has sold,
60 percent are in the developing world.
"Virtualization, which arguably is the most advanced state of the
art, does not have to be this complex mix of acronyms we seen," he
said. "What we've shown is it can scale down to some of the most
economically challenged environments in the world."
Dukker said that by using two PCs in each computer lab, the set-up
in India helps provide some redundancy. That helps address one
of the limitations to NComputing's approach--because one PC powers
several terminals, if something goes wrong in that PC, a whole
classroom could find itself offline.
"When you share a PC you do have a single point of failure," Dukker
said. Last month, NComputing announced it had recruited longtime
Microsoft executive Will Poole to serve as the company's co-chairman.
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