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Focus swings to thin-client computing

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Network-centric computing appears to be making a comeback as enterprises move to trim expenses, raise efficiency and boost security.

But John Kish, president and chief executive at Wyse Technology in California's Silicon Valley, said it never went away.

A much-hyped technology during the dotcom boom, network-centric computing is a low-cost architecture based on stripped-down terminals called 'thin clients', which access all data and software from a central server.

Numbers from International Data Corp (IDC) show that Wyse, Neoware, Hewlett-Packard, VXL Instruments, Sun Microsystems and Fujitsu-Siemens led sales of thin-client devices last year.

Still, thin clients accounted for about 1 per cent of the total PC market.

Mr Kish said the technology survived the lean times after the internet bubble burst because thin clients continued to offer all the functionality of personal computers, 'without the cost and security headaches associated with managing large numbers of desktop and laptop PCs'.

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