VMworld
2020 goes digital. Will you be in attendance? If the event were
physical, I would have looked forward to visiting with Login VSI. So we
reached out to them digitally instead.
With the current pandemic, we're seeing a lot of changes taking place
in our normal, everyday lives -- both professionally and personally.
One of those changes is the end of physical trade show events as we move
to socially distance ourselves from one another. While some trade
shows simply cancelled or postponed until 2021, others have made the
switch to a 100% digital format. VMworld, the world's largest
virtualization and cloud computing event hosted every year by VMware, is
one of those shows -- enter for the first time ever, VMworld 2020 Digital.
While a physical VMworld event would normally have north of 150+
sponsors, a digital VMworld event won't be able to effectively support
that number of sponsors.
Login VSI is dedicated to maximizing the end-user experience for digital workspaces. They do this by using synthetic users to automatically test and validate the impact of change in physical, virtual and cloud-based workspaces - safeguarding application and desktop performance.
It's time to gear up for VMworld
2020 digital! Get started now by
reading this exclusive interview with Blair Parkhill, Product Manager at Login VSI to learn more and
start
getting excited for what's to come!
VMblog:
A recent change in our world has been a shift to working from home. What are your thoughts on this? And how has it
changed things for your company both internally and externally?
Blair Parkhill: Virtualization and Cloud infrastructures have
really paved the road for a much stronger adaptation to recent remote working changes
due to COVID-19. However, how we use the infrastructures we've built has
changed... A LOT. We've basically had to ditch our on-prem strategies and make
everything accessible from outside in a secure, reliable, and speedy way. To
accommodate this, there will be a lot more change that is already on our plates,
and quickly acting on it is critical.
VMblog:
Can you give us the high-level rundown of your company's technology
offerings?
Parkhill: With so much change happening so quickly, how do
you ensure what you're going to release to production won't break your workforce
productivity. Basically, Login VSI offers tools that allow our synthetic users
to test pre-production workspace virtualization releases and post-production
continuous testing. Test your new image to make sure the latest Win 10 release
didn't break your apps. Or test your new image at scale to make sure it doesn't
overrun your infrastructure or slow down. Or even test continuously from remote
points to get an early warning on production workspaces becoming unavailable or
slowing down.
VMblog:
Talking about your product solutions, can you give readers a few
examples of how your offerings are unique?
What are your differentiators?
Parkhill: We help customers understand what their users
are experiencing. With so much change, the last thing they need is more
barriers to productivity. Login VSI gives customers a way to test their rapidly
adapting virtual desktop infrastructure and find issues before those users are
impacted through Acceptance and Load Testing. The platform can also
continuously test from multiple locations to let customers know when and where
poor user experience is detected.
VMblog:
For those individuals attending the VMworld 2020 digital event, or those
who have attended VMworld in the past, why should they be interested in your
company and solutions?
Parkhill: Because we have answers to questions, nobody else
has the answers. Will my line-of-business apps work after updating my Win 10
version? Will the hardware or cloud gear support the volume of users I plan to
support with a given machine after a change? When will the performance of my
production apps slow down enough to impact my users? When will my production
workspaces become unavailable to my users?
VMblog:
Normally, VMworld is the time of year that people in this industry
announce a new product or product update.
Do you have anything new that you've recently announced or plan to
announce? Can you give us the details?
Parkhill: We are announcing the release of Login
Enterprise to the VMware/VMworld community. Login Enterprise is a single
software platform based on a single virtual appliance that offers Application
Acceptance Testing, Scalability and Benchmark Testing and Continuous Production
Testing all from one place. This product is straightforward to use, can
interact with almost every production application like a human user, and has a
rich public API feature set. If you want to do anything I've talked about so
far, download our virtual appliance and have it up and running in minutes.
VMblog:
How does your company work with VMware?
Where do you fit within the VMware ecosystem?
Parkhill: We have a very long relationship with VMware.
Login VSI has been used to test Horizon reference architectures from every
vendor - including VMware - in the EUC space to evaluate the performance and
scalability of their solutions. VMware is also our customer who uses our tools
internally and for production validation, and they are a great partner in the
field.
VMblog:
VMware will be covering things in their keynote, but what big changes do
you see taking shape in the industry?
Parkhill: Be prepared to see a considerable balance of enterprise
workforces continue to work remotely. Also, potentially see enterprises chase
rural outsourcing domestically to drive down the cost of their workforce.
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