UT Knoxville Pilots Virtualized Desktops

In an effort to provide on-demand computing services to its campus community, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville is phasing in a program called Apps@UT, which will provide virtual desktops to students, faculty, and staff.

Built using Citrix XenDesktop running on Cisco's Unified Computing System and NetApp's Unified Storage Architecture, the Apps@UT program has already begun rolling out as a pilot, with virtualized systems being provided for users of the lab called The Commons @ John C. Hodges Library. The deployment there will allow more than 16,000 lab users to access virtual Windows desktops, according to information released by Citrix. (The Commons currently offers 181 physical Windows-based computers and 43 Mac workstations.)

In addition to providing computing services to students, the experiment with virtual desktops is expected to help reduce the strain on IT resources and cut down somewhat on energy use. As part of the deployment, Citrix NetScaler and Branch Repeater are being tapped to provide centralized management of systems and software, including patches, software refreshes, and maintenance. And as machines age, some of them will be phased out and replaced with low-power thin clients.

According to information released by Citrix, following the pilot in the Commons, virtualized desktops will be introduced in all of the labs operated by UT Knoxville's Office of Information Technology, then expanded further to the entire campus community, supporting both university-owned and user-owned devices.

In total, some 37,000 students, faculty, and staff members will have access to the system.

According to Scott Studham, UT Knoxville's CIO, the effort was driven largely by students. "The students on UT Knoxville's Technology Advisory Board were the visionaries driving the Apps@UT program, believing it will give all university students the high degree of flexibility and availability they have come to expect from technology today," he said in a statement released Wednesday.

Citrix partner LPS Integration is providing the university with support for the rollout.

The 560-acre University of Tennessee at Knoxville serves 21,300 undergraduates and 6,215 graduate students and offers more than 300 degree programs. The university employs about 9,800 faculty and staff members, including 1,300 instructional faculty.

About the Author

David Nagel is the former editorial director of 1105 Media's Education Group and editor-in-chief of THE Journal, STEAM Universe, and Spaces4Learning. A 30-year publishing veteran, Nagel has led or contributed to dozens of technology, art, marketing, media, and business publications.

He can be reached at [email protected]. You can also connect with him on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidrnagel/ .


Featured

  • college student sitting at a laptop writing a college essay

    How Can Schools Manage AI in Admissions?

    Many questions remain around the role of artificial intelligence in admissions as schools navigate the balance between innovation and integrity.  

  • a hobbyist in casual clothes holds a hammer and a toolbox, building a DIY structure that symbolizes an AI model

    Ditch the DIY Approach to AI on Campus

    Institutions that do not adopt AI will quickly fall behind. The question is, how can colleges and universities do this systematically, securely, cost-effectively, and efficiently?

  • person signing a bill at a desk with a faint glow around the document. A tablet and laptop are subtly visible in the background, with soft colors and minimal digital elements

    California Governor Signs AI Content Safeguards into Law

    California Governor Gavin Newsom has officially signed off on a series of landmark artificial intelligence bills, signaling the state’s latest efforts to regulate the burgeoning technology, particularly in response to the misuse of sexually explicit deepfakes. The legislation is aimed at mitigating the risks posed by AI-generated content, as concerns grow over the technology's potential to manipulate images, videos, and voices in ways that could cause significant harm.

  • laptop screen showing Coursera course

    Coursera Introduces New Gen AI Skills Training and Credentials

    Learning platform Coursera is expanding its Generative AI Academy training portfolio with an offering for teams, as well as adding new generative AI courses, specializations, and certificates.