GO-Global helps to reduce the cost and complexity of delivering Windows applications to users, wherever they are. GO-Global enables Windows ISVs to publish applications from any public, private, or hybrid cloud, to any device that supports a browser. GO-Global states that their service allows ISVs to deliver Windows applications at a lower cost than Microsoft RDS or VDI solutions from Citrix and VMware. Unlike products that wrap features around RDS, GO-Global provides full…
$4
per month per seat
VMware ThinApp (discontinued)
Score 5.2 out of 10
N/A
VMware ThinApp was application virtualization software allowing legacy web applications to run on newer OSs, post-migration, also for running apps across a variety of devices (e.g. flash drives, locked-down computers, etc.) for accessibility and security.
N/A
Pricing
GO-Global
VMware ThinApp (discontinued)
Editions & Modules
GO-Global
$4
per month per seat
GO-Global
$4
per month per seat
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
GO-Global
VMware ThinApp (discontinued)
Free Trial
Yes
No
Free/Freemium Version
No
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
All pricing is for concurrent seats. SSO is additional $0.50 per seat per month.
The only application that I have ever used that does exactly what VMware ThinApp does is Cameyo, and VMware is light years ahead of them in terms of usability. VMWare is the industry standard for application virtualization, and they do this by making a powerful product that is …
VMware ThinApp capturing and publishing is way more simple than the App-V approach, but App-V seems to be more suitable for the largest deployments. Application Virtualization seems to be less and less common today, as VDI approaches can solve some issues (like publishing apps …
VMware ThinApp is ideal for a business that is still using PCs over Thin Clients because often times when using web-based applications there are some that simply will not run in Internet Explorer 11. ThinApped packages are also much easier to deploy as the packages that I make, all you need to do is simply copy the folder into Program Files.
VMware ThinApp capturing and publishing is way more simple than the App-V approach, but App-V seems to be more suitable for the largest deployments. Application Virtualization seems to be less and less common today, as VDI approaches can solve some issues (like publishing apps from a virtual desktop instead of locally installed or virtualized packages).