Definitely going to take more time to develop and roll out as not enough of the world, let alone more developed nations have fast enough speeds necessary for something like game streaming to be feasible. Also video games are large, complex and resource intensive and require live input from the user, they can’t be buffered like videos or easily downloaded and edited like files.
I would say the main difference is RDP is remoting into a fixed location you have access credentials for. VDI is an environment specified to have its own login interface (i.e. the website login example) set by the platform provider - which will then direct you to your own controlled workspace within a platform. You won't be able to use RDP to access this, and vice versa.
@@aidandesilva Sorry, I don't see a diff here still. I use RDP. "VDI is an env specified to have its own login interface -> RDP has it as well, Win pop up where I need to put in creds. "which will then direct you to your own controlled workspace within a platform" > RDP does exactly the same, directs me to my own resource, my own VM on which I work and have my work data saved. Maybe I am missing sth, will do more reading :)
@@WhiteZorin RDP isnt provided to other users or could be, you need to open a specific port and both sides need to accept, in VDI you just can login into the server and use the desktop only for your own purpose.
They can both achieve the same thing but how they achieve is the key thing. With RDP its windows only and users access a singular server and they all share the resources of that server. An organisation may have a few RDP servers, depends on their size. VDI is OS agnostic and end users access their own VM, this means that if one user has particular beefy requirements their VM can have greater resources available. VDI is a lot more flexible for the end users need but is more complex and expensive to setup and maintain. RDS is less flexible but is easier to set up and cheaper to manage and maintain. So yes, they achieve the same thing but how they achieve it is different and which one will be implemented will depend on an organisations needs.
And whats upcomming: Streaming of video games you can play just with a good internet connection in 4K ultra.
Definitely going to take more time to develop and roll out as not enough of the world, let alone more developed nations have fast enough speeds necessary for something like game streaming to be feasible. Also video games are large, complex and resource intensive and require live input from the user, they can’t be buffered like videos or easily downloaded and edited like files.
I like your teaching method, i am looking for CompTIA Cloud+ video
Is VDI and RDP kinda the same thing with the exception of VDI being able to crossover through different OS systems?
I would say the main difference is RDP is remoting into a fixed location you have access credentials for. VDI is an environment specified to have its own login interface (i.e. the website login example) set by the platform provider - which will then direct you to your own controlled workspace within a platform. You won't be able to use RDP to access this, and vice versa.
Rdp doesn't use a hypervisor
@@aidandesilva Sorry, I don't see a diff here still. I use RDP. "VDI is an env specified to have its own login interface -> RDP has it as well, Win pop up where I need to put in creds. "which will then direct you to your own controlled workspace within a platform" > RDP does exactly the same, directs me to my own resource, my own VM on which I work and have my work data saved. Maybe I am missing sth, will do more reading :)
@@WhiteZorin RDP isnt provided to other users or could be, you need to open a specific port and both sides need to accept, in VDI you just can login into the server and use the desktop only for your own purpose.
They can both achieve the same thing but how they achieve is the key thing. With RDP its windows only and users access a singular server and they all share the resources of that server. An organisation may have a few RDP servers, depends on their size. VDI is OS agnostic and end users access their own VM, this means that if one user has particular beefy requirements their VM can have greater resources available. VDI is a lot more flexible for the end users need but is more complex and expensive to setup and maintain. RDS is less flexible but is easier to set up and cheaper to manage and maintain. So yes, they achieve the same thing but how they achieve it is different and which one will be implemented will depend on an organisations needs.