A
promising new application is Graphon. It is a software program
that allows you access to other software in your organization at a
fixed location. Here is an example.
Assume that in your company, there are 100 people and all of
them use Software A. You need to purchase 100 individual licenses for
that software, even though at any given time, only about 20 people are
using it. And some of your employees need to have Software A on their
home PCs and their laptops, so you need 20 more individual licenses.
You can do the math on how much that will cost
(including the need to install the software on each of the 120
desktops, and maintaining the updates.) Pretty pricey ...
Here is a better scenario. What if you could buy 20
concurrent licenses for Software A, install and maintain it on one
computer (a “server”) and give your employees access to the software on
the central server? Now, instead of paying for 120 licenses, you pay
for 20. Instead of buying 120 updates, you pay for 20. Instead of
updating 120 computers, you update the 1 server. Starting to sound
pretty cost-effective, isn't it?
Graphon lets you do just that - install an application
on a server locally, on your network, or at a provider (like WebIncome)
on the Internet. All of your employees can access it, from the office,
home or on their laptops.
Here is another scenario. What if you are tired of using that
OS that keeps attracting viruses and trojans, but you don't think you
have a choice since you are heavily invested in all the software that
runs on it? You do have a choice...
Industry analysts have predicted that with the Linux OS maturing rapidly,
it will be ready to go head-to-head
with Windows on corporate desktops within
two years. But you've invested so much
money in Windows software - won't it
be too expensive to even think about
migrating to Linux? Many who would consider
migrating will avoid it just for this
reason.
But with Graphon, you don't have to scrap all your old
software and buy all new. Remember, Linux is Open Source - you don't
need to buy the OS, you just need to download it. You don't need to buy
all new software - Open Source software is freely downloaded from the
Internet. Starting to think migration is possible? Read on ...
You set up one server (or have it available from a provider like WebIncome
via the Internet) with all of the licensed,
non-Open Source software that you want
to have available to your employees
(remember, you can buy a few concurrent
licenses, rather than one for every
potential user.) You install Linux or
other Open Source OS (remember, Open
Source OS's and software are not licensed,
you can download them for free) on everyone's
desktop computers plus install a browser
on each desktop computer. Via the browser
on their desktop computers, your employees
can access the software on the server
(or on the Internet), plus they can
have Open Source applications
installed on their individual desktops.
This is the good part - you save money on the OS, you save
money on software licenses, you save on the updating the individual
computers, and you are no longer exposed to the viruses, trojans and
other malicious software from the "other" OS.
So in the
end, you are the winner, not the software companies.
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