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The Register - Software: Virtualization

NodeWeaver says its perpetual licensing beats VMware’s perpetual price hikes NodeWeaver: Perpetual licensing beats VMware nickel-and-dime Microsoft cuts cloudy desktop prices by 20 percent Nutanix to add KubeVirt support to run VM on K8s at the edge Western Union zaps VMware and moves to Nutanix Nutanix thinks some Azure cloud desktops belong on-prem Nutanix thinks some Azure cloud desktops belong on-prem Nutanix brings its K8s to bare metal Half of VMware users plan to reduce usage by 2028 Xen Project announces five years of support for all releases Xen Project announces five years of support for all releases Broadcom says AI companies can’t make their own silicon One vendor doesn't mind high RAM prices: VMware NUC, NUC! Who’s there? ASUS with a thin client for cloud PCs Why flexibility will define the future of functionality AWS adds nested virtualization option for handful for EC2 Cisco set to release hypervisor as VMware alternative Cisco set to release hypervisor as VMware alternative Contain your Windows apps inside Linux Windows VMware scores early win in Siemens software licensing case Broadcom 'bulldozes' VMware CSPs with March deadline Java devs want container security - not the hassle Microsoft to face questions over From SA program Dell wants £10m+ from VMware if Tesco case goes against it Lenovo has a hunch you’re about to try quitting VMware China crew abused ESXi zero-days a year before disclosure China crew abused ESXi zero-days a year before disclosure AWS adds hybrid cloud storage support for Nutanix Nutanix pushes sovereign cloud in another swipe at VMware Nutanix pushes sovereign cloud in another swipe at VMware VMware kills vSphere Foundation in parts of EMEA European cloud trade group says EU should have blocked VMware-Broadcom merger Researchers spot 700 percent increase in hypervisor attacks Researchers spot 700 percent increase in hypervisor attacks Proxmox delivers its software-defined datacenter contender Proxmox delivers its software-defined datacenter contender HPE positions Morpheus stack as alternative to VMware VMware re-states claim Siemens used unlicensed software VMware re-states claim Siemens used unlicensed software 70-hour work weeks no longer enough for Infosys founder Veeam bets on more VMware alternatives Veeam bets on more VMware alternatives Ford straps in as Xen Project drives toward automotive use Microsoft reveals new cloudy AI PC that’s not a Copilot+ PC VMware admits it over-specced storage servers for years Server virtualization market heats up to win VMware refugees Kubernetes overlords retire Ingress NGINX Broadcom creates a new Seal Of Approval for AI servers Broadcom creates a new Seal Of Approval for AI servers Rideshare giant dumps 200 cloudy Macs, saves $2.4 million IBM Cloud stops seeking new customers for its VMware service In Tesco vs. VMware, Computacenter warns, Dell, Broadcom VMware bungles cloud management portal upgrade, twice VMware bungles cloud management portal upgrade, twice Microsoft starts streaming cloudy apps instead of desktops Open source Cloud Hypervisor adds (futile) no-AI-code policy Proxmox delivers datacenter manager beta VMware to lose 35 percent of workloads in three years – some to its friends at ‘proper clouds’ VMware to lose 35 percent of workloads in three years Citrix products sold under old licenses to get glitchy Rethinking application delivery for the hybrid world VMware's in court again. Tesco latest in line Broadcom admits it’s sold a lot of VMware shelfware Supermarket giant Tesco sues VMware for breach of contract DOGE delayed deals, says Nutanix VirtualBox 7.2 fixes 3D guests, adds Arm-on-Arm support Platform9 pushes swing capacity workaround for VMware shifts Virtualization vet pushes out Proxmox VE 9, Backup Server 4 Oracle VirtualBox licensing tweak lies in wait for unwary EU cloud players want Europe to annul Broadcom’s VMWare buy How to host a Linux-powered local dev site in Windows VMware portal prevents some users from downloading patches VMware slows release cadence for flagship VCF suite Telefónica DE shifts VMware support to Spinnaker due to cost Citrix returns to hypervisor market without updating wares VMware’s rivals ramp efforts to create alternative stacks
Cloudy PCs now often have lower TCO than laptops
Simon Sharwood Simon Sharwood · 2025-08-14 · via The Register - Software: Virtualization

Virtualization

Desktop-as-a-service now often cheaper to run than laptops - even after thin client costs

Human usage set to double, AI agents might need them too

Analyst firm Gartner has declared hosted PCs are now often cheaper to operate than on-prem laptops, and two years away from being cost-effective for 95 percent of workers.

That opinion emerged this week in the firm’s Magic Quadrant for Desktop as a Service (DaaS), which considers hosted desktops – not traditional on-prem desktop virtualization – and predicts that by 2027, 20 percent of workers will use a hosted machine as their main workspace, up from 10 percent in 2019. The Square of Sorcery also predicts that by 2027, virtual desktops will be cost-effective for 95 percent of workers, up from 40 percent in 2019.

Cost is a big reason for the shift.

“Total cost of ownership for DaaS, especially when users couple it with thin-client endpoints, is now lower than that of a laptop PC for many use cases,” Gartner wrote. “Enterprises continue to increase the mix of DaaS within their estates, but most are deploying DaaS for specific use cases rather than a complete PC replacement.”

The analyst also reckons DaaS has all but done for VDI.

“Gartner rarely speaks to an organization that is planning to deploy a new on-premises VDI solution. Net-new deployments are almost exclusively using DaaS, and on-premises deployments are either migrating to DaaS or moving to a cloud control plane,” reads a quote from the Quadrant.

Gartner's 2025 Magic Quadrant for Desktop-as-a-Service

Gartner's 2025 Magic Quadrant for Desktop-as-a-Service

Gartner rates Microsoft the runaway leader in the field. “No other vendor has such broad capabilities across digital workplace technologies, hyperscale cloud and AI,” the quadrant states, even though its three DaaS offerings - Azure Virtual Desktop, Windows 365 and Microsoft Dev Box – are all cloud-hosted. Gartner warns “Microsoft is prioritizing Windows 365 over Azure Virtual Desktop”, so buyers need to think carefully before committing.

Gartner also rates Citrix a leader in the field, as “Its intellectual property, especially its protocol and management plane, alongside its integrations, allows more use cases to be addressed than with other vendors.” The analyst notes that Citrix only sells DaaS in bundles that can leave buyers paying for product they don’t want, and warns that the vendor seldom offers subscriptions shorter than three years to its large customers.

Omnissa, the former end-user-compute limb of VMware, won Gartner’s admiration for its “strong offering for deployments of all scales.” However the analyst says its customers have expressed concern that Omnissa may struggle to continue providing solid global support.

AWS also made Gartner’s Leaders in the field, winning recognition for bundling management tools with its Workspaces DaaS.

Agents, too?

Software agents may also start using virtual desktops, according to end-user computing specialist Tony Foster, who has a day job at Dell but blogs as “wondernerd” and this week noted the growing number of AI tools that can operate computers.

“All the geeks on TV keep talking about how these AI agents will be able to do things for you, like book dinner reservations, or hotels, schedule meetings, and other mundane tasks,” Foster wrote, before observing that to do so agents will need to access a computer.

He thinks computers designed for human use won’t be optimal.

“For example, if I give an architect a virtual desktop designed for an accountant and tell them to create a new facility. They can probably do it, but it won’t be efficient or easy to do. You want to give the end user the best tools to do their job.”

Agents, Foster observed, won’t need a mouse, and pop-up notices won’t be relevant.

“They will need new ‘desktops’ optimized for them to use,” he suggested, before wondering “How will these new workspaces be licensed?” He considered two options: Discrete licenses for workspaces licensed for human and agentic use, and licenses that cover use of a workspace by a human and a set number of agents that work on their behalf.

For what it’s worth, Microsoft already offers an “ Unattended License” for non-human users of its products. ®