Agency users wanting to test out applications before buying can do so online at the new Microsoft TestDrive Center. You dont need to load software on a local machine, just go to www.microsoft.com/government and click the TestDrive Center link.
But TestDrive Center may not be whats notable here. As of the launch last month, there werent a ton of applications to testseveral Office programs (not surprisingly), a forensics case management solution and a records system portal, among them. Whats notable is that by testing the applications, you get first-hand experience with an underlying technology that could really come in handy. When youre sitting at your computer playing with, for example, Microsoft Project, the program acts like its running on your hard drive, but it isnt. Citrix Systems Access Suite is delivering the program to your screen over a secure connection.
Citrix vice president of government systems Mark Goldman seemed genuinely surprised when it was suggested the new Microsoft site was a better showcase of Access Suites abilities than the demo apps. At a time when thin-client computing sounds like an attractive way of connecting government users to applications, Access Suite may be a good fit based on its ability to quickly and securely transmit virtually any program to any computing device.
Last month Citrix released Version 4.0 of Access Suite, including its components Citrix Presentation Server, Access Gateway and Password Manager. The new suite includes what Citrix calls SmartAccess technology, which senses things such as where a user is accessing an application from and over what network. With that information, Access Suite can control what the user is allowed to do, such as edit a document but not save it.
Systems in action
For more in-depth testing of Microsoft-based products, agencies and their contractors can now visit the Microsoft Technology Center in Reston, Va. Designed for prototyping and validating computer systems, its the sixth such center the company has opened but the first geared toward government solutions. The Envisioning Center is an MTV-like studio where customers can see demonstrations of Microsoft productsas long as they dont entail wireless communications. Center director Joe Bennett told a visiting GCN editor this is because theres a secure room below the Envisioning Center for discussing defense and intelligence programs.