At today's technical keynote from Citrix iForum The App Delivery Expo, presented by Citrix, Citrix revealed and demoed their new client strategy, called "The Citrix App Receiver."
The idea is straightforward. Today there are many different, unrelated, and sometimes conflicting software clients from Citrix, including:
- The ICA client, for connecting to Presentation Servers and
Desktop Server XenDesktop Servers. - The streaming client, for running applications locally on a Windows workstation streamed down from Citrix Presentation Servers.
- The Citrix EasyCall client, for invoking phone calls from your client device via the corporate phone network.
- The Citrix Access Gateway client, for connecting to CAGs in an SSL-VPN way.
- The Advanced Access Control endpoint analytics scanning engine, which is used to determine the capabilities of your client device and whether it is vulnerable to security problems.
- The WANscaler software client, for WAN acceleration between central offices and mobile users.
- The EdgeSight for Endpoints client, which runs on a workstation and sends usage and performance metrics to a central server.
- The Citrix Online GoToMeeting client, for participating in online meetings.
- The Citrix GoToAssist client, allowing users to summon support from their helpdesk.
- Third-party plugins across the board, that enable additional functionality to any one of these clients.
Wow! This is quite a list if you look at it all at once.
The idea moving forward is that Citrix will make one single client called "The Citrix App Receiver." The app receiver will be something like a framework client that can receive plug-ins to enable specific functionality. Each of these items that was previously a standalone client will snap-in to the App Receiver.
Citrix used the cable TV industry "set-top box" analogy, where you have a receiver that can receive programming, messages, program guides, etc., as a service. Citrix wants to do the same thing for applications with the App Receiver.