Likelihood to Recommend Currently Azure Virtual Desktop enviroments are our first choice for all customers. Especially because most of our customers already have a M365 License which includes Azure Virtual Desktop usage. We deploy it for both RemoteApp and Full desktop solutions. This gives us the flexibility to "lift and shift" a specific workload of more legacy customers towards the cloud and provide them with a secure solution to use their apps in the cloud from anywhere.
Read full review Considering Oracle VDI is not supported by Oracle anymore, and will not receive any future updates, I wouldn't recommend Oracle VDI for most scenarios. Unless your organization is under some strict contractual agreement or there is a feature in Oracle VDI that isn't supported in its modern successors/competitors (haven't come across a feature like that based on my experience), I would recommend using something like
VMware Horizon .
Read full review Pros Better computing power Configurable System and as per team needs configuration can be added or removed at ease Internet Connectivity within the cloud system is way better than our home / office internet connections No heating issues on personal machines, leaving all the worry on actual data center machines Read full review Providing desktop operating system virtualization is way more manageable using this Oracle suite. It has a robust security infrastructure and provides great audit trails. Read full review Cons Use the Azure portal, Windows Virtual Desktop PowerShell and REST interfaces to configure the host pools, create app groups, assign users, and publish resources. Publish full desktop or individual remote apps from a single host pool, create individual app groups for different sets of users, or even assign users to multiple app groups to reduce the number of images. As we manage our environment, we use built-in delegated access to assign roles and collect diagnostics to understand various configuration or user errors. We use the new Diagnostics service to troubleshoot errors. Read full review Frequent disconnects causing me to have to reboot my server. Can be laggy at times. Freezes regularly. Read full review Usability From the end user's perspective the usability is not impacted at all.
Read full review Performance The easiest way to describe the performance is like this - when it is working, it works almost flawlessly. When it starts freezing, your day is going to get very interesting very quickly. As I have stated earlier, I used it for one purpose, and it did what I needed it to most of the time, but I did have issues with it.
Read full review Alternatives Considered I think that the cloud based [Azure] Windows Virtual Desktop is the future and sets the precedent for how these should be configured in the future. I've used cheap options and other more expensive options, but VD is the best when compared to Citrix or freeware. I would recommend it to anyone over these.
Read full review VMware Horizon does everything that Oracle VDI is capable of doing and offers many more features, and unlike Oracle VDI, it is still receiving constant updates. Oracle VDI was a great solution for enterprise-level management of virtualized desktop when it was getting updates, but now that it won't be getting any, I would put it in the "outdated technology" category.
Read full review Return on Investment More people can work from home which is a positive contribution to company’s objective of promoting work life balance Reduced building operating costs with more staff working from home At any point in time Significantly reduced loss of data if a user loses or damages a work laptop Read full review Pricing Models were harsh to begin with, so we invested more money on the license than we needed to. Due to all of the laggy, buggy, and crashing interfaces, our administrators spent considerable additional time working on simple operations. We missed out on many advanced features that Oracle VDI's competitors were rolling out, so we couldn't benefit from them. Read full review ScreenShots