Get Rid of Your VPNs! – Host All Your Applications with Cloud Computing
April 4, 2011 at 1:13 pm Leave a comment
You may be one of those organizations with a number of different locations all connected with VPNs. Don’t get me wrong, VPNs are great and provide secure connectivity across public connections perfectly. Great solution for transmitting data from location to location. But companies use them to run applications across and that’s where the mistake is.
By using a VPN to connect to a central application or file location, you’re hand-cuffing the user with poor performance. So poor in fact that most remote locations where this occurs struggle every day. You have a centralized application, or many of them, that users across the country need access to and that’s they way the “industry” thinks it should happen. Not productive!
A VPN isn’t the answer, in fact, it allows the problem to exist. The answer is hosting that application in the cloud at either a data center or by utilizing a cloud service like IVDesk. By moving the application to IVDesk we can make it available to all locations and have the user experience as good as if they were right next to the servers. Imagine that all your applications run very fast from every location across the country. No more slow-downs, no more waiting, just connect, login, and go!
That’s how all our customers work and have been working for almost a decade! Connect from any Internet connection securely, run all your applications from within a virtual remote desktop, and work as if you were in the main office all the time. Even when you’re working at night from home or remotely from a hotel anywhere.
Get connected today and get more information about moving your applications to a centralized hosted location, IVDesk. Besides the obvious benefits, cost saving can be dramatic. Give us a call today to get a review started and see if there’s a fit for you.
Thanks,
Bill Sorenson
CEO
www.IVDesk.com
Entry filed under: General. Tags: cloud computing, disaster recovery, ivdesk, SMB, VPN.
Trackback this post | Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed