`Green IT Doesn`t Work if Users See Red` says Symbio Technologies

Released on = August 12, 2007, 6:48 am

Press Release Author = Symbio Technologies

Industry = Environment

Press Release Summary = Symbio Technologies say the concept of green computing will
not be widely accepted if IT administrators and desktop users have to pay too big a
price to save money and the environment. One of the keys to being successfully green
is that the technology must provide real benefits to the network without disrupting
how users get their work done. Symbio\'s stateless computing approach saves energy,
boosts an organization's economic outlook, and helps the environment while letting
everyone in the enterprise work on the same applications and at the same speeds as
their wasteful, old-fashioned friends laboring on costly, energy-consuming and
non-secure PC's.

Press Release Body = NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. - The concept of "green" computing will not
be widely accepted if IT administrators and desktop users have to pay too big a
price to save money and the environment say Gideon Romm and Roger Del Russo,
co-founders of stateless computing leader Symbio Technologies, a pioneer and
innovator in the greening of IT.

What's more, Romm and Del Russo readily admit that achieving economic and ecological
benefits for businesses was not a priority in their original business plan.

"Truth be told, we didn't set out to be 'Ben and Jerry'," said Romm, who met and
formed an alliance with Del Russo while the two were working for a New Jersey-based
tech company in the late 1990's. "What Symbio (www.symbio-technologies.com) set out
to do - and did - was change how businesses, government, schools and other
distributed computing environments view and use desktop computers after doing it
basically just one way in the 26 years since IBM introduced its Personal Computer."

The Symbio solution - in use around the world - consists of small, inexpensive
diskless thin clients linked to the server by the Symbiont boot appliance. "This
approach creates an environmentally-friendly, cost-effective solution that
represents the future of computing," said Del Russo, noting that "Symbio provides a
data-secure environment with desktop devices that have no moving parts to break, do
not make noise or create heat and use less energy running than PC's do when turned
off (and plugged in)."

Romm said that "Symbio's mantra is a secure, data-free desktop. But now, as green
has turned to gold for smart IT companies and their customers, businesses see
diskless computing with our solution as a way to save significantly on their power
consumption, on their desktop end-of-life costs, and on their need to dispose of
obsolete computers, all of which adds up to dollars on the bottom line and
ecological benefits as well."

Del Russo agrees . . . and then some. "In a nutshell," he said, "Symbio enables
excellence. We save energy, boost an organization's economic outlook, and help the
environment while letting everyone in the enterprise work on all the same
applications and at the same speeds as their wasteful, old-fashioned friends
laboring on costly, energy-consuming and non-secure PC's."

'The Quest for Green Gravy'

"Being green is great, but not if the green system doesn't get the original job
done," said Romm. "Technology must be efficient and secure, helping an organization
simplify its networks and safeguard its data. Then, and only then," he said,
"should we install a system that can also save money and is kind to the environment.

"If this were a video game," added Del Russo, "it could be called 'The Quest for
Green Gravy,' because the basics must be handled first while everything else,
including the greening of IT, is, in a word, 'gravy'."

Romm said that one of the keys to being "successfully green" is that the technology
must provide real benefits to the network without disrupting how users get their
work done.

"Diskless desktop devices must seamlessly support Windows Terminal Services and
popular platforms and applications," said Del Russo. "If you don't give the people
what they want, even if your idea or product is better, it may well die on the
vine."

"The Symbio approach," said Romm, "is designed to support Windows, Open software,
and other operating systems and applications while securing the desktop, running at
the speed of the server, and saving money and the environment along with way."

"Gideon and I may be more like Ben and Jerry than we ever thought," mused Del Russo.
"They used imagination to create ice cream that people love, and we've created a
'cone' that supports the many flavors of computing. And we don't even have to wipe
our chins when we log-off!"

About Symbio Technologies
Symbio Technologies is the leader in server-centric "stateless" computing. Symbio
designs and manufactures hardware, software and services that enable businesses to
reduce the time, complexity, and costs associated with deploying and maintaining
computer networks. Symbio\'s highly secure, simple, and environmentally friendly thin
client solution consists of a network appliance called The Symbiont Boot Appliance,
stateless Symbiont desktop terminals (diskless thin clients), and value-add
subscription services. Its solutions connect users to a variety of environments,
including Microsoft Windows Terminal Services, VMware VDI, Citrix Presentation
Server, Linux/Unix, NX Server, IBM iSeries and zSeries, and virtually any midrange,
mainframe, or other legacy system. Symbio markets its products worldwide through a
growing network of distributors, value-added resellers and integrators in Australia,
Canada, Chile, Israel, Mexico, Pakistan, South Africa, and the U.K. as well as
throughout the U.S.A.


Web Site = http://www.symbio-technologies.com

Contact Details = 134 North Ave. Suites E and F
New Rochelle, NY 10801

tel: 914-576-1205
fax: 914-576-0944

email: support@symbio-technologies.com

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