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Last modified: Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Indiana University teams with Citrix to deliver "Personal Cloud" to students, faculty and staff

Citrix enables IU to "Go Virtual" with any device in any location

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 8, 2011

SANTA CLARA, Calif., and INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. -- Citrix Systems and Indiana University announced today that IU has chosen Citrix as a preferred partner in helping the university deliver and support virtual technologies for its approximately 100,000 students, faculty and staff. The partnership effectively creates a "Personal Cloud" where users can access applications and data as an on-demand service — anytime, anywhere, and on any PC, Mac, tablet or smart phone.

Using Citrix XenDesktop® with FlexCast™ technology, IU will be able to extend a broad range of applications and data to faculty, staff and students as a secure cloud-based service regardless of their location. In turn, the IU community will have access to licensed software and data storage at any time, on any device - whether a laptop, desktop, tablet or smart phone.

The implementation, code-named IUAnyWare, comes as part of IU's phased initiative to establish a new model for personal computing in higher education, and provide desktop virtualization to increase operational efficiencies, reduce desktop support costs and increase accessibility and security of user applications and data. The IU initiative will utilize Citrix XenDesktop to deliver a personal computing environment as a cloud service, and Microsoft SharePoint for localized cloud storage. The benefits IU expects are:

  • More efficient and innovative use of human and fiscal resources
  • Better and expanded service to students, faculty and staff
  • Extended life-cycle of current equipment
  • Greater opportunities for software licensing efficiencies
  • Greater security and disaster recovery
  • Greater flexibility

"Citrix XenDesktop is helping us transform the way we deliver and support personal computing devices and applications," said Sue Workman, associate vice president of support at Indiana University. "The IU IT staff is spending an large percentage of support hours just maintaining, patching and upgrading hardware and software at these multiple locations. Staff can be utilized for higher-level activities in IT, and in teaching, learning and research. Virtualization allows us to more effectively use IT to support the university's educational mission by allowing our users to get access to resources wherever they are and from whatever device they choose."

Workman added that the higher education community is increasingly demanding the flexibility to connect to university resources whether on campus, at home or using a smart device elsewhere. Students will gain access to the same software packages on their machines as they have in campus computing labs, and faculty and staff will have access to software and files wherever they are in the world. With the ability to deliver multiple types of virtual desktops to its user population, IU will be able to ensure that users have access to their desktop and apps to complete coursework from any device. The university required this type of flexibility that also scales on the back end.

Indiana University has multiple campuses and nearly 100 labs, some of which are shared with students from other universities and community colleges. IU manages systems in these labs and is able to deliver appropriately licensed software directly to the individual student. Indiana University's first step in the phased rollout is delivering virtual applications to a brand new Advanced Manufacturing Center of Excellence facility in Columbus, Ind., where joint ventures are underway with other local universities in support of certification and degree programs and workforce training. Once lab environments are up and running, IU will continue incorporating additional users with the aim of delivering upwards of 200 applications to university-, employee- and student-owned devices.

"This project is part of a major initiative to rethink the way we are delivering IT services to all of our users, and to be able to reduce desktop support needs and deploy those resources to more strategic initiatives. Citrix has been a key contributor and enabler of our goals. We are looking forward to working with Citrix to roll out virtual desktops and applications across all of our users university-wide," said Workman.

"Indiana University is taking a very important step in transforming desktops and applications into a leveraged, on-demand personal cloud service. Traditional desktop computing is expensive and time consuming to support, especially for university campuses where new applications and desktop images are required every semester. Additionally, students and faculty are demanding greater flexibility in where and how they work, given the variety of locations they need to be during the day. XenDesktop is helping the university to lower support costs, increase device support, and ultimately enable virtual work styles for all faculty, staff and students," said John Fanelli, vice president of marketing, Enterprise Desktops and Applications at Citrix.

About Indiana University

In addition to providing its students one of the nation's best and most advanced computing, networking, and technology support environments, Indiana University is a leader in the development and application of information technology. Indiana University manages state, national, and international research networks; participates in such high performance computing initiatives as the National Science Foundation's TeraGrid and FutureGrid; partners with other top-tier universities on open source software development; and provides nationally recognized leadership in cybersecurity.

About Citrix

Citrix Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ:CTXS) is a leading provider of virtual computing solutions that help people work and play from anywhere on any device. More than 230,000 enterprises rely on Citrix to create better ways for people, IT and business to work through virtual meetings, desktops and datacenters. Citrix virtualization, networking and cloud solutions deliver over 100 million corporate desktops and touch 75 percent of Internet users each day. Citrix partners with more than 10,000 companies in 100 countries. Annual revenue in 2010 was $1.87 billion.

For Citrix Investors

This release contains forward-looking statements which are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The forward-looking statements in this release do not constitute guarantees of future performance. Those statements involve a number of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially, including risks associated with the impact of the global economy and uncertainty in the IT spending environment, revenue growth and recognition of revenue, products and services, their development and distribution, product demand and pipeline, economic and competitive factors, the Company's key strategic relationships, acquisition and related integration risks as well as other risks detailed in the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Citrix assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking information contained in this press release or with respect to the announcements described herein.

To speak with Workman or for more information, please contact Steve Chaplin, University Communications, at 812-856-1896 or stjchap@indiana.edu.