
In case you haven’t noticed, the diversity of mobile computing devices continues to grow with no signs of slowing down. From netbooks to smartphones, and everything in between, consumers have a dizzying range of choices, many of which have captured their imagination in ways that old school corporate computing devices could never do. And this explosion of devices took a step function leap forward this past weekend with the release of the Apple iPad.
Having spent most of my career in IT, I see tremendous new opportunities in trends like these. The simple truth is that if employees like the devices they’re using, and they take those devices with them wherever they go, they will be more productive (work longer hours) and be happier doing it because they’re not stuck in a gray cubicle, staring out the window and wishing they could go home.
At the same time, this level of personal mobility can be terrifying for IT from a security perspective. If we thought it was difficult to control the confidential company data floating around on corporate laptops, what happens when people want to start using all of these exciting new personal devices for work tasks? We can always issue new policies and controls trying to prevent employees from using such devices, but that’s rapidly becoming a fool’s errand. The horse is already out of the barn. If IT leaders don’t figure out how to support employees on devices like this in a secure way, they will simply start going around us… which is 10x worse.
Here at Citrix, we’ve been working hard to help solve this kind of problem in ways that are a win for both employees and IT leaders…extending our virtual computing solutions to a wide range of mobile devices, including netbooks, Macs, iPhones, Blackberries, Androids and Windows Mobile devices. This past weekend, we extended that to the new Apple iPad with two exciting new iPad apps. The new Citrix Receiver for iPad makes it easy for iPad owners to take their virtual office with them anywhere they go by providing secure, one-touch access to all of their Windows business applications and documents. The Citrix GoToMeeting for iPad brings the same level of simplicity to the world of business meetings, making it easy for iPad owners to collaborate from anywhere via online meetings that are both effortless and visually stunning.
In my mind, these new announcements continue to evolve our Bring Your Own Computer (BYOC) offerings. Typically when people talk about Citrix and BYOC, the conversation centers around our upcoming XenClient Type 1 bare-metal client hypervisor installed on a laptop. Certainly XenClient will offer an incredible new level of choice for work and personal environments on a single machine, (you’ll be hearing a lot more about XenClient at Citrix Synergy 2010 in San Francisco next month, BTW… very exciting stuff that’s going to blow a lot of people away, but I’m sworn to secrecy for the moment). However, just like Citrix does not believe that VDI alone covers all desktop virtualization scenarios, we also don’t believe that client hypervisors alone represent all BYOC use cases.
For me, using a lightweight software “receiver” on these client devices, while running the main apps, documents and desktops securely in the datacenter, makes a lot of sense when one starts to consider the capabilities and use cases of these mobile devices. Consider low cost netbooks as an example. They are low cost primarily because they are low powered… in effect, a really cheap laptop designed mainly to access things on the web. Using any kind of client-side hypervisor on devices like this… type-1 or type-2… simply doesn’t make sense. Even a slick new device like the iPad isn’t nearly powerful enough to run high-end Windows business applications, especially ones that require 3D graphics, financial modeling or data analysis.
For over 20 years, Citrix has been solving this kind of problem for traditional PCs and thin clients with our XenApp product line. More than 230,000 organizations worldwide have standardized on XenApp, and are using it to deliver an estimated 25 million Windows applications to more than 100 million end users every day. We’ve recently extended that leadership into the broader desktop virtualization space with our market-leading XenDesktop, delivering all flavors of virtual desktops from a single system with our FlexCast™ delivery technology. Both of these products allow customers to deliver Windows desktops and apps securely from the datacenter with a high quality user experience over any network, thanks to our high-definition HDX™ technology.
With the addition of Citrix Receiver, we can now light up millions of mobile devices… including the new iPad… transforming them into powerful business tools… all with virtually no additional support needed from IT… and with the security of knowing that the apps, documents and data never leave the datacenter. Simply delivering these services over an HDX connection without thinking about the complete user experience, however, is still likely to result in dissatisfied end users. To truly enable “work from anywhere” on such a diverse range of mobile devices, we also had to consider how users would interact with the applications, documents and desktops on each unique type of device. I blogged recently about how remote native Windows applications could be re-skinned to enable some of these use cases and also provide IT the ability to retain their security posture and enhance their service offerings for business users.
The new Citrix Receiver for iPad is a great example of this kind of attention to detail. User experience is something that Apple has understood for years. The iPad is getting rave reviews because it was clearly designed to be better than a smartphone and laptop at certain functions, and not a just a compromise of an existing form factor. To light up the iPad for business, we knew we had to think the same way. Our goal was to transform the iPad from a great personal mobile device into a great business mobile device. We knew that simply opening up a secure tunnel to hosted Windows apps or desktops wasn’t going to cut it. We had to do something truly worthy of the iPad… the kind of solution that would excite iPad owners by really taking full advantage of the unique attributes of the device itself.
When you try out Receiver for the iPad, the first thing you’ll notice is that it provides a great looking personal workspace with a slick, intuitive way to organize apps and documents. We also tried to take advantage of the touch interface to enable simple navigation so users can complete tasks efficiently and naturally, whether they’re working with native iPad apps, or their Windows business apps and documents.
• We’ve even created a something we call the “Wireless Trackpad” which allows you to use your iPhone as a mouse for the iPad.
• “Auto-Fit” detects the orientation of your device and automatically adjusts the session resolution.
• We’ve simplified gestures to make it easier to interact with Windows applications on the iPad.
• User self-service access to IT managed resources is also provided, as well as the flexibility to connect to your full Windows desktop, if desired (if you don’t have an iPad yet, check out our online video tour ).
I personally think the iPad will predominately be a content viewing and editing device, not a full replacement for a content creation device like a Windows or Mac laptop, but this will still lend itself to some really cool use cases such as secure health care record viewing, more accurate and secure entry of content such as patient prescriptions, sales presentations, field services, etc. Chris Fleck posted a great blog on this (“Top 10 Business Uses for the iPad “).
Another key aspect of declaring the iPad “open for business” is the work we’re doing to enable online business meetings. I’m very excited by the addition of the GoToMeeting app we’ve designed specifically for the iPad. I’ve used GoToMeeting for many years, and now that I am at Citrix and more mobile than ever, it’s become an essential part of my work life. When I work from home, I hate having to fire up my laptop just to use GoToMeeting. Now I can grab an iPad, tap on the meeting invite, and I’m in. It’s easy. It looks great. And I’m free to walk around while connected to the meeting. I’m highly unlikely to do that with my laptop or netbook device. Even when I am in the office, I often find myself ducking into a conference room just to setup a laptop and connect to a GoToMeeting. I’d much rather just carry my iPad to the meeting and take it wherever I go. It truly delivers on the promise of “meetings to go” in a way that’s far more profound than I think most people realize. I’m also looking forward to using the same device to read my books when I fly so I can stop carrying the physical books to lighten my load.
While the iPad may not be for everyone, it’s already created a lot of fans over here at Citrix… including me. In addition to all the value I can get with Citrix Receiver and GoToMeeting for my business life, there are armies of smart and creative people around the world building native iPad apps to enable me to do so much more from a single device, on a form factor that I find delightful. I’m also very pleased to see Apple start to add native enterprise security features. I can now bring my own device and use it to be more productive and have the flexibility to be me. I believe the very notion of what a desktop is, will continue to change over the next decade with this type of innovation. Others out there are also thinking this way in terms of the user experience. As this evolution continues, Citrix is well positioned to help IT bridge the gap between traditional enterprise computing and the unstoppable market forces of consumerization. BYOC shouldn’t be limited to a single device type or technology, and the IT organizations who recognize this early are the ones who will end up with more successful, productive and happy employees.
As millions of Apple iPads begin shipping tomorrow, Citrix has released an exciting new iPad app designed to transform Apple’s revolutionary new personal computing tablet into the ultimate device for mobile business. The new Citrix Receiver for iPad app makes it easy for iPad owners to take their virtual office with them anywhere they go. One simple touch gives iPad owners instant, secure access to all of their Windows business applications, documents and desktops, making it easy to work on the go, while still enjoying the great user experience they bought an iPad for in the first place. ![]()
More than 230,000 organizations worldwide use Citrix virtual computing infrastructure every day to deliver virtual desktops and more than 25 million Windows applications to their employees. The new Citrix app for the iPad acts as a secure “receiver”, making these millions of Windows apps instantly accessible on the iPad.
For iPad owners, this means “Windows Apps and Desktops to Go” – directly on your new iPad – with all the rich performance you’d expect, thanks to Citrix high-definition HDX™ technology. For IT administrators, this means you can now support iPads with virtually no setup cost, using the same Citrix infrastructure you’re already running today. And because all the Windows apps and documents are actually running in your datacenter at all times, it’s actually more secure than many of the corporate laptops you’re supporting today. Best of all, you can give your employees everything they need to be more productive by using devices that they love to spend time on.
With Citrix Receiver, the iPad is now “Open for Business”.
Key Facts and Highlights:
- Secure Data and Communications - Send emails and calendar invites using your standard corporate email systems, and work on all your normal Windows apps and documents just as you would on a PC or laptop with a full high-definition user experience. Because these apps and data are never stored on the iPad, your business is always confidential and secure.
- One-tap Connect to Read, Create and Share Documents - Interact seamlessly with Windows apps and documents using intuitive iPad gestures, and even turn your iPhone into an iPad trackpad for fast and familiar screen navigation (yes, it is “wicked cool”).
- Resource-Intensive and Demanding Apps - Use even the most demanding Windows apps, from complex modeling and databases to 3D professional graphics applications… all with a high-speed, visually compelling user experience (check out our video tour to get a sense of what this is like).
- Online Meetings to Go - Collaborate with colleagues and host secure online business meetings from wherever you happen to be – at a café, in a hotel, or on the road with Citrix GoToMeeting for the iPad.
- Access Your Full Windows Desktop - You can even run your full Windows virtual desktop on the iPad if you like, switching back and forth between the iPad and Windows as needed.
Related Resources and Announcements:
- Citrix Receiver for iPad is available today free of charge from the Apple App Store
- Full details about Citrix Receiver for the iPad
- Video Tour of Citrix Receiver for iPad
- Top Ten Business Uses for the iPad
- Live Cloud Demo of Citrix Receiver for iPad
Learn more about virtual computing solutions from Citrix and other industry leaders by attending Citrix Synergy in San Francisco, May 12-14.

1.2 times a day!
Sometimes more, sometimes less. Over the last 284 days, that is the average number of times I have been asked about Citrix Receiver for Blackberry.
I know what your thinking…. “Marcus, why didn’t you Blog on this topic 283 days ago?“
It’s a story of intrigue, suspense, broken promises and big money. More on that latter…
For those of you who have followed Citrix for any length of time, you might have heard that Mobility is the Next Big Thing. Almost yearly; usually around mobility industry events.
So what makes this year different? – Devices and network speeds.
Citrix Receiver unlocks the power in these fast and eloquent devices, allowing us to create a terrific user experience.
Before you start screaming that the iPhone is not an Enterprise solution, hear me out. When the iPhone was introduced, it provided an ideal form factor to deliver applications. Fits in your pocket and it has a big, beautiful screen with lots of real-estate for users to interact on. Citrix users agree. We are quickly trending towards the 500,000-download milestone. Meter readers, land surveyors and even motorcycle cops are getting their principle applications delivered to their iPhones daily.
Recently I had the chance to meet with Samsung, HTC and other key manufacturers in the “Smartphone” business. There are devices being introduced this year that dwarf the 3-year old iPhone technology. The first on my list was announced today.
The HTC EVO 4G delivers. It has a 4.3-inch touch screen that just looks beautiful when Citrix Receiver is delivering applications to it. Many similar devices are coming soon for all of the Mobility Operating Systems.
Currently we offer a Citrix Receiver for Android, Windows Mobile and iPhone. We also have a Symbian client.
We understand how important the Blackberry is in the Enterprise. In fact, through a Company called Rove, the Blackberry was one of the first mobile devices to have a Citrix client. At Citrix, almost 35% of our Smartphone users have a Blackberry.
Our intent was to come out with Citrix Receiver for Blackberry about the same time as the iPhone. Each platform has it’s own teams, so this goal was very realistic. In an effort to further accelerate this development, we took some time and acquired outside technology, believing it would provide us with a solid platform that we could quickly iterate on in the future. We were not happy with the result.
We decide to start again from scratch, armed with the knowledge gained from delivering Citrix Receiver on the other platforms.
I am pleased with the internal build I am using and feel comfortable sharing that with you today.
We hope to announce registration for the beta program shortly. Those who have already signed-up, your names have been retained and you will be contacted. If you haven’t registered, please send me your name, device, OS version and memory size. We want to test against as many configurations as possible. When you come to Synergy, be sure to bring your Blackberry to the opening Keynote.
On a separate note, look for Citrix Receiver for Android 1.0, with full CAG support, to be available on the Android Marketplace within a few weeks.
I’ll have a special post for you on April 3rd that you won’t want to miss.
In closing, I sincerely thank you for you patience and suggestions as we look forward to getting Citrix Receiver onto your Blackberry.
No doubt you have heard about the iPad by now and you may be already pondering whether or not you will be buying one. Chances are you have a Laptop or PC and a Smartphone already so you need to rationalize how you will use it beyond e-books and browsing. Well if your company has XenDesktop or XenApp you will be happy to know you will be able to use your iPad for real work as well. It turns out the 9.7 inch display on the iPad with a 1024×768 screen resolution works great for a full VDI XenDesktop. Windows applications run unmodified and securely in the data center, and even multiple applications at once. The advancements that were made for the Citrix Receiver for iPhone will carry over to the iPad, however the iPhone restrictions of screen size and small keyboards are overcome with the iPad. It’s a beautiful thing ! The iPad looks to be an ideal end point device that can empower users to be productive were ever they are and IT will be able to safely deliver company hosted virtual desktops and apps without worry.
So tell us if you want Citrix Receiver for the iPad and let us know how your going to put it to work. ( even it’s just to rationalize buying another gadget
)
Learn how to make the iPad work for your organization at Citrix Synergy.
Regardless of what it was designed for and despite all it’s limitations, I expect the iPad to be the best thing to happen for Desktop Virtualization in 2010. No it’s not always the best Thin Client but as a sales, marketing and awareness enabler it won’t be beat, here’s why:
Purple Cow effect - Seth Godin, the new media marketing guru defined the Purple Cow as something remarkable. Something that stands out from the crowd and worth noting. A great example is the screen shot of Windows 7 on the iPad. This picture was replicated and written about in hundreds of articles and blogs… because it was remarkable. The Gizmodo post alone now has over 62,000 views and 520 comments.
Early adopters will show friends & colleagues - The iPhone started the new phenomena of showing off your latest cool or useful app. Everyone with an iPad and Citrix Receiver will show it off. Godin also makes the point that it’s not the best ideas that win, it’s the best ideas that spread, win.
First impressions count - The iPad is beautiful, when prospects recognize they can also do work with it they will sell it to themselves. The $500 entry price is low enough to justify for companies or many individuals.
Peer envy - As more iPads show up in the workplace and they are put to work visibly and effectively, others will follow.
Executive mandate - When execs see they can run all their work apps from an iPad and get their work done where ever they are, they will better appreciate the benefits of Desktop Virtualization. They will also approve projects faster and demand IT support for their own iPad.
Internal IT promotion - Internal company Desktop Virtualization champions will set up demos on the iPad, hand it to users and management … Sold !
Preferred device for conference room meetings - The iPad will be ideal for bringing to meetings without the intrusion, distraction, boot up or power cables of a laptop. In the future the laptop will be staying in the office/cube while you grab the iPad to bring to the meeting down the hall or down the road. ( and everyone else in the meeting will ask you how you like it )
Sales demo tool - Sales pros everywhere will use iPads to demo their products, check inventory and bring up photos and then hand the iPad to a prospect. Not something you see happen often with laptops. Desktop Virtualization will enable the apps and be the answer to ” how did you do that ? “
Healthcare, Healthcare, Healthcare - Doctors will sell more iPads with Desktop Virtualization into healthcare than anyone. Even if they have to buy the iPads themselves.
Vertical Market Solutions - Besides healthcare, many other verticals like legal, insurance and field workers will adopt the iPad rapidly if the Apps they need are available via Desktop Virtualization.
Desktop Virtualization overcomes iPad limitations - Multi-Tasking, Flash, Windows apps, all resolved with Desktop Virtualization.
BYOC - As described in a prior post , The iPad with Desktop Virtualization will lead the “Bring Your Own Computer” BYOC movement and provide IT a safe way to allow personal devices inside the company.
Multiple Desktop Virtualization options - The iPad will work great with VDI ( XenDesktop ) or shared Virtual Desktops ( XenApp Published Desktops ) or selected Apps on-demand ( XenApp ). VDI only solutions will not always be justified for every user or app.
Multiple Device Management - For most iPad users this will be a 3rd or 4th device, in addition to a smartphone a work laptop and a home PC/laptop. The hassle of making sure you have the document you need on the device you have will be solved by the centralization benefits of Desktop Virtualization.
Standard Desktop Virtualization benefits - In addition to all the above reasons , the standard benefits of security , manageability and TCO still apply. But now it’s really productive and cool…
Besides the overall benefit to the Desktop Virtualization industry I expect that the Citrix Receiver for iPad will expand the advantage that XenDesktop already has over VMware View. The Citrix user experience will be superior to the other 3rd party RDP/VNC options available and create very visible differentiator. As a result I predict that VMware will end up building their own View client to try to catch-up and take advantage of the emerging iPad phenomena. ( For the VMware execs reading this … please prove me wrong and don’t follow my prediction …
)
Come see the iPad enabled by Desktop Virtualization at CitrixSynergy. Learn how to make it work for your organization and sell yourself on the idea. ( you may even win an iPad ! )
Check out our Pod at Mobile World Congress. We are guests of RIM. The booth is pretty cool… all of the pods look like Storm devices. Their conference booth is located at STAND 8B192, STAND 7B26, STAND 8B178. At our booth, the local Citrix team in Spain is demonstrating Citrix Receiver for mobile devices.
Thanks to our friends at RIM for providing their space and support.
Or Windows on Mac, Thin Client, WinMo, iPhone…
The list grows as Citrix Receiver continues to make the end computing device ambigous. In a previous post I showed how Windows applications or desktops can be delivered to an iPhone, iPod Touch or iPad.
Right after the post, the guys in engineering called me up and said, “Hey, we’re not finished yet…”. In addition to iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad, Citrix Receiver also runs on Android, WinMo, Thin Clients, Mac and PC platforms.
The small feat of magic is that all of this can also be run from a web browser.
I can see it now, you are roaming somewhere, and think, ok let me login to work for a couple of seconds to check something. You launch the browser on your mobile device, Mac, PC or Thin Client and your Desktop is streamed to you. While checking a few things in your work desktop, you navigate away to take a call or use a local app, then navigate back to your work desktop … the way you just left it.
Mobility and the way we live, play and work has just been turned on it’s ear. Bring your own computer (BYOC), an industry momentum started by Citrix, is now a reality for companies that don’t mind providing the desktops and applications for employees to get their work done, but would rather do without the time and expense of maintaining specialized hardware out in the field, or even on employees desks.
Citrix runs Windows applications and Desktops from a central server, called XenDesktop, and pipes it out to your mobile device through the NetScaler AGEE so the data is secure on both the Client and Server side. So, just in case you are not fanatical about the iPhone or iPad, you can still take advantage of the most awesome technology to hit the computing model for the average person. Citrix Receiver along with XenApp and XenDesktop becomes an incredible deal for organizations with a number of different Clients … after all the personal computing device is personal, and you can’t always choose the device the end user will show up with.
Having seen a Windows 7 Desktop running on an iPhone, a PC and a Mac, I wasn’t all that surprised when engineering showed me Windows 7 Desktop running on Android. If you don’t think you need the entire Desktop, you can pipe one or two applications to these devices using XenApp and Citrix Receiver.
We used the previous infrastructure for this Proof Of Concept, because it was already setup with XenApp and XenDesktop. The only new pieces were the end devices. Once again, we used the Citrix Web Interface in XenApp for authentication to keep it simple, however, we have done POC’s with the same setup using LDAP and two factor authentication from the NetScaler AGEE.
Guides
You can have this setup, by following the guides we wrote up as a result of this testing.
Download the Deployment Guide – ICA Proxy for Citrix Receiver.
Download the Deployment Guide – ICA Proxy for Citrix Web Interface.
Citrix Products used in this POC
XenServer
XenApp
XenDesktop
NetScaler AGEE
Citrix Receiver v2.1
Client devices
iPhone
iPod touch
iPad
Mac
PC
Android
WinMo
Thin Client
Watch it live
Tap into the power of AppExpert!
Most desktop apps are designed with multiple Window Pane’s to organize data and make it consumable without forcing a users eyes to scan from one side of a monitor to another. In many cases these Pane sizes are discretionary for the developer or already user adjustable. Given that, why not make the Window Pane sizes easy to consume on a mobile device ?
It turns out that the 320×480 Pixel screen of the iPhone provides a very readable Window Pane whether its displayed with multiple Panes on a desktop app or one at a time on a mobile device. That same Window Pane of information can also look great on an iPhone when hosted on XenApp and displayed with the Citrix Receiver. If it’s done right, navigating multiple window Panes of a Desktop app can be done without constant zooming, pinching and panning.
A great new usability feature in version 2.0 of Citrix Receiver for iPhone includes a “Pane-Swipe” gesture that will shift the “view” one Pane at a time with a 2 finger swipe. A user can simply swipe left or right or up and down whether the iPhone is in Portrait or Landscape mode. The result is users can be productive when mobile without the common complaint about dealing with a small screen. This scenario makes securely delivering apps to Desktops or Smartphone’s easier than ever. Even better, many desktop apps can easily be configured without coding to provide a great mobile experience. The app displayed is standard desktop Office Excel 2007 with both a Mobile and Desktop View. Certainly some apps would need to be modified but the effort could be minimal vs the multi-platform development and support alternative . The apps could be Windows, Web, or RIA apps like Flash and Silverlight. In fact for many vector based apps simply publishing the app on XenApp at the right dimension will make it Mobile-Friendly ( i.e. publish a 3 column app at 960 wide )
Some native iPhone apps are great, but they can open IT issues around security, compliance and support of employee owned devices ( BYOD ). Even if the organization accepts the security implications and allows native email or other business apps, there are bound to be more company app requirements than can be solved with only existing native apps. It is also becoming more obvious that the iPhone will have some serious competition, fortunately many of the new devices are also adopting the same 320×480 screen resolution. So that same Mobile-Friendly desktop app can also be delivered to devices from Motorola, HTC, Samsung, Google
, etc. The OS of the new device doesn’t matter either as long as it’s equipped with the Citrix Receiver.
To get started check out the Mobile-Friendly demos fom your iPhone on CitrixCloud.net and visit CDN where you can get more details on how to Mobilize your apps.
If you are a developer, are your apps Mobile-Friendly? Keep this in mind for your next app project. Mobilizing your app is easier than you thought.
Let us know what you think, could be useful for your organization?
Or any Application for that matter.
Chris Fleck gave fair warning. I’m here to tell you that it works and its here, now. The computing model just got turned on it’s ear.
Why would you want this? Because it increases your mobility without having to reboot your laptop everytime you want to use it, it saves time and money, and it delivers any Windows platform or application to your iPhone, iPod or iPad.
What was previously just a future scenario is now a reality.
Citrix runs Windows and Windows Applications from a central server, called XenDesktop, and pipes it out to your mobile device through the NetScaler AGEE. This is perfect for the iPad which has a screen size of 1024×768. Now the touch, squeeze and pinch is available for all of your Enterprise applications, making them usable on an iPad.
The small form factor of the iPhone was a little hindering for Enterprise applications. Now, with the iPad and Citrix Receiver, Enterprise Apps are usable. Although, while putting together this POC the Product Manager sent me an eMail from Microsoft Office 2010 running on a Windows 7 Desktop … from his iPhone. This confirms that form factors and the computing model is about to be rocked.
The magic is in the way that Citrix hosts the Windows desktops and delivers them to the mobile device. The advantage is all of the computing power of multi-core processors and large memory can still be utilized by Windows, while all of your touching and pinching power is localized at your mobile device.
All of the communication is done over secure tunnels, so all of the information is secure.
For this Proof of Concept, We started with XenServer, installed XenApp and XenDesktop, built a NetScaler to Front-end and secure the infrastructure, and fired up our iPhones and iPads. Its fast, easy and cool. We used the Citrix Web Interface for authentication to keep it simple. You can also use LDAP or any other type of authentication method.
Guides
You can have this setup, by following the guides we wrote up as a result of this testing.
Download the Deployment Guide – ICA Proxy for iPhone, using LDAP authentication.
Products
Citrix Receiver is available for Free on the App Store
Get an iPhone, iPod or iPad from Apple.
Watch it live
Tap into the power of AppExpert!
Here is a quick 38 second demo video of using SMS (Text Message) based authentication on Citrix Receiver for iPhone.
There is no need for hardware token. Your iPhone is all you need to access corporate applications. And you don’t have to remember or copy paste the random number in a hurry…
Click here to view the video and discover many others on Citrix TV
For more information, please visit our community page.
Information about Citrix Receiver for iPhone
Ray (Ruiguo) Yang
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