Wyse
Wyse Technology is an American company that is a leading manufacturer[1] in Cloud Client Computing. Products include thin client hardware and software[2] as well as desktop virtualization.[3] Other products include cloud software-supporting desktop computers, laptops, and mobile devices.[4] Wyse Technology is partnered with IT vendors such as Cisco, Citrix, IBM, Microsoft, VMware.[5]
History
1980s
Wyse Technology was founded in 1981[5] by Garwing Wu, Bernard Tse, and Grace Tse.[6] The company became famous in the 1980s as a manufacturer of character terminals. Most of these terminals can emulate several other terminal types in addition to their native escape sequences.[7] These terminals were often used with library information systems (electronic card catalog).[8] In 1983, Wyse began shipping the WY50, a terminal. Priced 44% lower than its nearest competitor, the cost was so low that the media at first thought Wyse was giving away $50 with every shipment. It became their first high-selling product, and had a larger screen and higher resolution than competitor products at the time.[9] The Wyse 99GT and 160 terminals added graphical capability through Tektronix 4014 emulation.[10]
In 1984, Wyse entered the personal computer marketplace. The first of these was the Wyse 1000, a computer based on the Intel 80186 (which did not see huge volumes due to poor compatibility with the 8088). Next came the WYSEpc, an IBM-compatible computer based on the 8088 processor, which had a good following due to its slim-line design. Later, Wyse introduced personal computers compatible with the IBM AT based on the 80286 and 80386, which were top sellers. Wyse sold through 2-tier distribution, which limited growth in the late 1980s as mail order companies like Dell and Gateway entered the marketplace. In 1984 Wyse became one of the leaders in the general purpose text (GPT) terminal industry and on August 17, 1984 went public on the New York Stock Exchange. In the following years, Wyse added the PC product line Wyse pc3216.[9] The Wyse 3216 was based on Intel’s newest 386 chip. It sold for $1,500 less than a comparable Compaq DeskPro, $2,000 less than an IBM System 80, and performed at a higher speed than both. In 1989 Wyse developed LAN-attached communication devices.[7][10]
1990s
Wyse was an early innovator in off-shore electronics production, with its products being built in Taiwan in company owned facilities. In 1990 Dr. Morris Chang organized Channel International, a Taiwan consortium, which gathered business owners together and was a booster for Taiwanese individuals owning U.S. companies.[7] In 1990, Channel International acquired Wyse.[10][11]
From 1990 to 1994 Wyse focused on PCs with CPU upgradability. Wyse created a proprietary upgradability concept called Modular Systems Architecture, or MSA.[10] In October 1992, Wyse became ISO 9001:2000 certified.[10]
In the mid 1990s Wyse Taiwan became the parent company of Wyse Technology. As the PC and server industry became more competitive, in 1994 Wyse management began to focus on making terminals.[7] They worked on enabling them to support the graphics and capabilities needed to display Windows and Internet applications. In late 1994, the company developed two thin client prototypes, and selected Citrix, then a small company, to provide the protocol and server side of the model.[11]
The machines differed from traditional text-mode terminals in that by supporting modern GUI applications using a mouse and windowing systems. The clients are able to access these applications using protocols that send drawing commands or raw pixel data (instead of strings of text characters) over the data connection. Because of the greater bandwidth this requires these machines typically use ethernet connections to the server, rather than the RS-232 links used in the past.[10]
In November 1995, Citrix and Wyse shared a booth at the Comdex tradeshow. Wyse introduced the Winterm windows terminal (now referred to as a thin client) models 2000 and 2500. Citrix introduced WinFrame, the Windows NT-based “Windows mainframe” software it connected to. At the show, the Wyse Winterm was awarded the “Best of Comdex” award.[11] Later, Wyse secured a patent (# 5918039) for the thin client design.[12] In 1997, Microsoft released Window NT Terminal Service Edition, which supported the Wyse thin clients.
After the thin clients were well-received by the market, Wyse introduced several additional models, including stand-alone (Winterm 2300), LCD monitor-integrated (Winterm 2600), and the tablet-shaped mobile Winterm 2900 and 2930 models. In 1997, Wyse introduced the first thin-client remote management software system, Wyse Remote Administrator.[11]
In 1999, Wyse Technology once again went public, but this time on the Taiwan Stock Exchange (TSE).[10]
2000-present
In 2000 Wyse acquired Netier Technologies of Texas, and turned Netier's Rapport thin device management software into the Wyse Device Manager.[11] In 2003 Wyse went private and company shareholders reorganized the company,[13] selling assets such as real estate and company-owned manufacturing facilities in favor of contract manufacturing.[11] In April 2005[11] the controlling interest of Wyse was acquired by Garnett & Helfrich Capital, a private equity firm specializing in venture buyouts.[13]
In 2005, Wyse, working closely with Citrix, Microsoft, and VMware,[15][16] expanded thin clients to support the newly introduced virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI). In April, Wyse and IBM signed a Joint Initiative Agreement (JIA).[11]
Tarkan Maner was appointed CEO[6] in February 2007.[17] Under Maner, the company significantly expanded research and development.[11][18]
In August 2007, Wyse recapitalized, with overseas investors regaining the controlling interest from Garnett & Helfrich Capital. In March 2008 the company formalized a partnership with Novell. In October of that year, Wyse formed a global partnership with IBM under the Global Alliance Agreement.[11]
In August 2010, Wyse created its Mobile Cloud Business Unit with the introduction of Wyse PocketCloud.[19] The mobile cloud app allows users to access their desktop on iOS or Android devices.[20] In the same month, Wyse became ISO 9001:2008 certified, and in November became ISO 14001:2004 certified and announced a "Strategic Collaboration Partnership with Cisco.[11]
The company introduced zero clients in 2010.[11]
According to the IDC, as of 2011 Wyse is an international leader in what are called "enterprise devices" (terminal clients and thin clients combined).[21]
Recent awards
- Education Investor Award 2011 Finalist: Technology Supplier of the Year
- Wyse Voted as 2011 Top Work Place
- 2011 Microsoft Windows Embedded OEM Partner Excellence Award
- 2011 Mobile Merit Awards Winners Announced! - Wyse PocketCloud[22]
- TechAmerica Foundation Announces 2011 American Technology Awards Finalists - Wyse Xenith
- The Top 20 Cloud Software & Apps Vendors of 2011
- 2011 Appy Awards Winner - Productivity Category - Wyse PocketCloud
- Thin / Zero Client Computing (Winner) - Wyse Xenith 1.0
- Tech & Learning Leader of the Year award[10]
Notable employees
Martin Eberhard began his career as an electrical engineer at Wyse Technology, where he designed the WY-30 ASCII computer terminal as his first product. David Grus, Philip Graham, Jo Ellen Wagner and Kevin Martin were some of the first engineers working on the WY-1000, and later the WYSEpc. This team had previously worked at Hewlett-Packard in the early 80s, where they worked on HP's first personal computers, such as the HP-150 touch screen computer. As of 2011 Graham and Wagner are at Cisco working on that company's TelePresence range, Graham as the lead.
David Dix worked first on the very first Wyse terminals and later the high end personal computers. David also worked at HP prior to Wyse. Dix is working at ShoreTel.
Wyse CTO Curt Schwebke and CMO Jeff McNaught prototyped and led the design of the first Winterm products. They are also holders of the first thin client patent.[12] Tarkan Maner was appointed CEO in February 2007.[17]
Competitors
Competitors in the market place include: HP,[4] VXL, Devon IT, Axel, Fujitsu-Siemens and IGEL Technology, among others.[23]
Facilities
Wyse Technology is headquartered in Silicon Valley in San Jose, California. It also has development centers in Bangalor, India, and Beijing, China. It has sales offices around the United States and in:
Environmental initiatives
Wyse has published research on the environmental benefits of cloud client computing.[17] According to the company, to minimize environmental impact, their cloud client computing products are smaller than that of competitors. Up to 90 percent of Wyse products can be recycled, and the hardware meets WEEE recycling process guidelines. The company also has an e-Waste recycling program.[24][17]
Products
Software
- Cloud Software
- Wyse Zero – Wyse Zero Engine software that drives the ultra-light Wyse ThinOS operating system
- Wyse PocketCloud – Wyse software that allows iOS and Android mobile devices to access desktop files and applications remotely
- Wyse WSM – Wyse server software that distributes and manages OS and application software to just a few or many thousands of cloud PCs
- Management Software
- Wyse Device Manager – Wyse enterprise-class server software that allows easy configuration and management of just a few to many thousands of Wyse thin clients
- Wyse Configuration Manager – Wyse server software, allows full integration of Wyse Windows Embedded thin clients with Microsoft management platforms, including SCCM
- Virtualization Software
- Wyse TCX – Wyse software that resides on Wyse cloud clients to accelerate and enhance the user desktop experience
- Wyse Virtual Desktop Accelerator – Wyse software that resides on cloud clients. It accelerates traffic from server to cloud clients, even over lower-speed or long distance TCP connections.
- Wyse PC Extender – Wyse software that resides on lecacy PCs that enables them to act as diskless cloud clients to leverage existing PC investments.
Hardware
- Thin Clients
- S10 – Economical, compact thin client running Wyse ThinOS operating system.
- C10 – Compact thin client running Wyse ThinOS operating system.
- V10LE – Expandable thin client running Wyse ThinOS operating system. Supports dual video and numerous I/O options
- R10L – Very thin client running ThinOS operating system, supports multiple video displays and is suited to high-end users running demanding multimedia apps
- S30 – Economical, compact thin client running Windows Embedded Compact operating system
- C30LE – Compact thin client running Windows Embedded operating system.
- V30LE – Expandable thin client running Windows Embedded Compact operating system. Supports dual video and numerous I/O options
- C50LE – Compact thin client running Ubuntu Linux operating system.
- T50 – Compact, economical thin client running Ubuntu Linux operating system. Sets a new price/performance standard for thin clients.
- V50LE – Expandable thin client running Linux operating system. Supports dual video and numerous I/O options.
- R50L – High performance thin client running Linux. Supports dual video and numerous I/O options.
- R50LE – The R50L with an expansion slot to add more connectivity options.
- C90LE – Compact thin client running Windows XPe operating system.
- V90LE – Expandable thin client running Windows XPe operating system.
- R90L – High performance thin client running Windows XPe operating system. Supports dual video and numerous I/O options.
- R90LE – The R90L with an expansion slot to add more connectivity options.
- C90LEW – Compact thin client running Windows Embedded Standard 2009 operating system.
- V90LEW – Expandable thin client running Windows Embedded Standard 2009 operating system.
- R90LW – High performance thin client running Windows Embedded Standard 2009 operating system. Supports dual video and numerous I/O options.
- R90LEW – The R90LW with an expansion slot to add more connectivity options.
- Z90SW – Wyse’s highest performance single-core processor thin client running Windows Embedded Standard 2009 operating system. Supports dual hi-def video and numerous I/O options.
- C90LE7 – Compact, thin client running Windows Embedded Standard 7 operating system.
- R90L7 – High performance thin client running Windows Embedded Standard 7 operating system. Supports dual video and numerous I/O options.
- Z90S7 – Wyse’s highest performance single-core processor thin client running Windows Embedded Standard 7 operating system. Supports dual hi-def video and numerous I/O options.
- Zero Clients
- E01 – Wyse zero client for use with Microsoft Windows Multipoint Server (WMS) 2011
- Xenith / Xenith Pro – Wyse zero client family for Citrix. Both are designed for Citrix HDX environments, Xenith Pro offers extra performance and connectivity options for high-end, demanding multimedia applications.
- P20 – Wyse zero client for VMware. Leverages on-chip PCoIP processing to increase performance and graphics display.
- Cloud PCs
- C00LE – Compact cloud PC
- V00LE – Expandable cloud PC supporting dual video and numerous I/O options
- R00L – High performance cloud PC with dual video and numerous I/O options
- R00LE – The R00L with an expansion slot to add more connectivity options.
- Z00D – Wyse’s highest performance cloud PC with dual hi-def video and numerous I/O options.
- Mobile Clients
- X50c – Mobile thin client running Linux operating system
- X90cw – Mobile thin client running Windows Embedded Standard 2009 operating system with an 11.6” display.
- X90c7 – Similar to the X90cw, except it runs on Windows Embedded Standard 7
- X90mw – Mobile thin client running Windows Embedded Standard 2009 operating system, dual-core processor, and a 14” display.
- X90m7 – Similar to the X90mw except it runs on Windows Embedded Standard 7 operating system.
See also
References
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- ^ Thibodeau, Patrick (May 18, 2010). "Wyse Technology's new device isn't your father's dumb terminal". Computer World. http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9176929/Wyse_Technology_s_new_device_isn_t_your_father_s_dumb_terminal. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ Bulkeley, William (30-Sep-09). "Businesses Take Another Look at Virtual Desktops". The Wall Street Journal. http://webreprints.djreprints.com/2284391420111.html. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ a b McLaughlin, Kevin (31-Aug-11). "Wyse Technology: We're Benefiting From HP's PC Uncertainty". CRN. http://www.crn.com/news/client-devices/231600575/wyse-technology-were-benefiting-from-hps-pc-uncertainty.htm;jsessionid=c62gCtk-NqOMLquSuukcRA**.ecappj03. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ a b "Is it Wyse to Make Your Best-Selling iPad App Free?". All Things D. 16-Dec-10. http://allthingsd.com/20101216/is-it-wyse-to-make-your-best-selling-ipad-app-free/. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ a b "Wyse Technology, Inc.". Business Week. http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapId=36739. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ a b c d "Company History - Wyse". Funding Universe. 1996. http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/Wyse-Technology-Inc-company-History.html. Retrieved 2011-10-31.
- ^ "Promotional Video: Wyse Technology in Schools". Wyse Technology. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MgvEhuGCmc. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ a b "And the last shall be the first". Forbes. November 16, 1987.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Home". Wyse. http://www.wyse.com/about/index.asp. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Press Releases". Wyse. http://www.wyse.com/about/news/pr/index.asp. Retrieved 2011-10-31.
- ^ a b "Patent". USPTO Patent Database. June 29, 1999. http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsrchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=5918039.PN.&OS=PN/5918039&RS=PN/5918039. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ a b "Wyse Technology Inc.". Hoovers. http://www.hoovers.com/company/Wyse_Technology_Inc/ctcsci-1.html. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ Donnelly, Caroline (15-Sep-11). "Wyse sounds PC death knell". CRN UK News. http://www.channelweb.co.uk/crn-uk/news/2109511/wyse-sounds-pc-death-knell. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ "The Death of the PC". Forbes. 28-Dec-09. http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2009/1228/technology-virtualization-vmware-wyse.html. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ Courbanou, Dave (16-Aug-11). "Wyse: Pushing Beyond Thin Clients to Virtualized Platforms". The Var Guy. http://www.thevarguy.com/2011/08/16/wyse-pushing-beyond-thin-clients-to-virtualized-platforms/. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ a b c d Maner, Tarkan (12-Dec-08). "Virtualization and the Greenlight Effect". VM Blog. http://vmblog.com/archive/2008/12/12/virtualization-and-the-greenlight-effect.aspx. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ Brodkin, Jon (2-Apr-10). "Amerisure ditches its PCs, goes all virtual". Network World. http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/040210-amerisure-virtual.html. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ Dotson, Kit (1-Sep-11). "Wyse CEO Tarkan Maner Makes Plans to Disrupt the PC Paradigm". Silicon Angle. http://siliconangle.com/blog/2011/09/01/wyse-ceo-tarkan-maner-makes-plans-to-disrupt-the-pc-paradigm/. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ Strohmeyer, Robert (23-Jun-11). "Control Your PC From Your iPad With Remote Desktop Apps". PC World. http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/230840/control_your_pc_from_your_ipad_with_remote_desktop_apps.html. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ "Worldwide Enterprise Client Devices Tracker - Q1 2011 Results". IDC. May 2011. "Taxonomy note: Enterprise Client Devices = Thin Clients + Terminal Clients."
- ^ "Apps by Wyse Technology Inc.". Android Market. https://market.android.com/developer?pub=Wyse+Technology+Inc. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ Atkinson, William (26-Sep-11). "Seattle Children's Hospital's Latest IT Project Meets with Universal Acceptance". COI Insight. http://www.cioinsight.com/c/a/Case-Studies/Seattle-Childrens-Hospitals-Latest-IT-Project-Meets-with-Universal-Acceptance-514905/. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ "Home - Green FAQ". Wyse. http://www.wyse.com/green/green_faq.asp. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
Further reading
External links