Provide access to university software from home and enable off-campus access with BYOD
Read more about the continuity of IT service during disruptive periods, and the technologies involved.
One of the key challenges for higher education IT is getting the right software to the right students when they need it. With added complexity from software license agreements, virtual desktop technologies, and other factors such as supporting on-campus labs, this goal is made even trickier by unforeseeable events with the potential to disrupt service.
Most obviously, as recent events demonstrate, widespread illness has the potential to disrupt university services and bring the academic timetable to a standstill, alongside many other unavoidable circumstances such as adverse weather or union strikes in travel systems. In this article, we’ll discuss the various technologies and principles which can enable IT to continue providing software throughout these situations, whether your students are able to make it to campus or not.
Providing the best student experience possible, particularly in the digital domain, is key to students achieving the highest possible grades, improving university rankings and increasing student retention and enrolment. Giving students the option to work in the way which best suits them is a large part of this, regardless of any unusual circumstances. A compromised student experience caused by anything that obstructs, or has the potential to obstruct this should be considered when looking at software delivery solutions. In short, disruptions can prevent students from working in their chosen ways, thereby affecting grades, retention, enrolment and, ultimately, revenue and funding.
“Improve student outcomes thanks to on-demand access to software, anytime, anywhere.”
Students not able to attend physical locations means managed hardware and specialist labs are unused, and their ‘over-time’ costs are entirely wasted resources during these periods. Furthermore, the more hardware and physical real-estate IT has the manage, the less focus can be assigned to supporting BYO devices. Lots of managed hardware and specialist labs greatly limited the number of locations that students are able to study and work from, and that faculty are able to teach from. This can turn a situation that has the potential to disrupt services into a situation guaranteed to disrupt services, carrying with it the same detriments anything that can compromise the student experience.
One of the key challenges for higher education IT is getting the right software to the right students when they need it. With added complexity from software license agreements, virtual desktop technologies, and other factors such as supporting on-campus labs, this goal is made even trickier by unforeseeable events with the potential to disrupt service.
Most obviously, as recent events demonstrate, widespread illness has the potential to disrupt university services and bring the academic timetable to a standstill, alongside many other unavoidable circumstances such as adverse weather or union strikes in travel systems. In this article, we’ll discuss the various technologies and principles which can enable IT to continue providing software throughout these situations, whether your students are able to make it to campus or not.
The primary factor to consider in ensuring continuity of service is BYOD, or ‘bring your own device’. It is not viable to provide every student and faculty member with a portable, managed device, let alone to continue to manage all those devices while their users are mobile. For this reason, to truly avoid disruption of IT service to students and staff, BYOD is essential. – use their own devices so they can work from anywhere.
“Enable remote and flexible learning by giving students off-campus access to academic resources such as their software apps”
That said, it is possible to negate the impact of situations that have the potential to affect software access by ensuring your software delivery is as flexible and versatile as possible. For example, reducing the number of labs that are specialist, and making all software available in all labs (also referred to as ‘virtual labs’ or ‘open-access learning areas’) can help to manage to the problem. This extends to any satellite campuses, premises or buildings. The more options students and faculty have for accessing their software away from main campus/specialist labs, the lesser the impact on student experience and outcomes.
In the event of campus closure, you want students to be able to still access the academic resources and software they need wherever they are. Continuity of service can be ensured through the correct practices and technologies. AppsAnywhere can detect a user’s context to choose the most appropriate method of delivering software, which is essential to true BYOD and open-access to software. With an appstore-like front-end, your BYOD users will receive a user experience consistent with that of on-campus or managed machines, keeping potential support requirements at a minimum. Additionally, AppsAnywhere Analytics can expose usage statistics of software titles and delivery methods to inform IT on where systems are reaching their usage limits and, conversely, where costs could be saved on delivering software.
Each of the key software delivery technologies commonly used in universities today carries with it its own benefits. For example, VDI permits cross-platform delivery that doesn't rely upon end-devices' hardware. This makes it particularly good for the delivery of heavyweight apps to BYO devices. It also enables software titles with ‘onsite only’ licenses agreements to be delivered anywhere due to them technically being executed on virtual desktops which are spun up within onsite servers. With VDI being the costly, yet powerful solution that it is, it's good practice to reserve using its licenses for situations in which it is necessary. Generally, consider delivering using desktop virtualization in the following scenarios:
Contrary to VDI, application virtualization can leverage the hardware capabilities of the end device resulting in fewer expensive VDI licenses being used concurrently during disruptive circumstances. Application virtualization is a brilliantly versatile technology for delivering Windows apps to Windows devices, with solutions like Numecent's Cloudpaging being able to deliver 100% of apps. Application virtualization is a worthy consideration in any of the following situations:
Ultimate guide to application virtualization
As the least expensive and specialist, yet one of the most time-consuming delivery methods to manage, imaging should be treated with care to help alleviate demands for software without increasing the workload for IT too much. Imaging is only really viable on managed devices and so, in times of disrupted service, it may not be the most effective technology to deliver to remote students/users. That said, making as much use of imaging on managed devices in the interest of keeping as many VDI and application virtualization licenses available as possible can help ensure that software is always available. Consider imaging for the following situations during extenuating circumstances:
Use AppsAnywhere's out-of-the-box virtualization software to deliver key apps to the relevant faculties and student groups. Making specialist apps available on-demand via app virtualization means these potentially heavyweight apps aren't relying on university-owned server power to run and that software titles don't need to be 100% downloaded in order to initially run. Alternatively, for apps that must be run in a lab/on-campus for security reasons or otherwise, use AppsAnywhere and VDI/RDSH protocols to spin up virtual desktops and deliver apps within those desktops. The virtual machines can be persistent and retain user information and settings upon log out without having to be destroyed.
Most importantly and in times like the current, times of uncertainty, it is important for as many things as possible to remain consistent. In this context, user experience is very important; AppsAnywhere provides a route to accessing apps that remains exactly the same for staff and students no matter which delivery method is used. The importance of consistency in questionable times cannot be overstated and, furthermore, will ensure that obstacles, user-error, and demands on support are kept to a minimum, all while providing an awesome student experience.
Watch our 30-minute webinar with AppsAnywhere Co-Founder, Tony Austwick, and learn how to deliver academic apps off-campus and enable a university BYOD strategy.
In this webinar you’ll learn:
Auto validation is still available as an option. We aim to ensure there are as few occasions of attempting to launch but being unable to as possible, and where they occur, explaining why.
Detection occurs during validation - the client is given a list of directories to look in and it returns what it finds.
Dark mode wasn't something we were able to do for this version, but it is something that we are looking to include in the future.
If client download is not available in that instance - such as in labs mode or if client install is suppressed, then the client link will not appear. The client download link will also only appear on platforms which have a client - i.e. Windows and macOS.
If you would like to upgrade to 2.12 please submit a support request and the team will be touch.
To implement BYOD in a cost-effective and sustainable way, schools will need a clear idea of a number of key data points to understand which technologies are necessary and how many licenses of each technology are required: Number of users/devices Weighting of device type/platform (Windows vs Mac vs Linux) Software titles to deliver Usage data on software titles for licensing User groups requiring specialist software You can read more about implementing BYOD policies in schools in the SecurEdge article, ‘How to successfully implement a BYOD program into your school’ > https://www.securedgenetworks.com/blog/how-to-successfully-implement-a-byod-program-into-your-school
With a BYOD policy implemented, schools can begin working to introduce centralized communication points such as Virtual Learning Environments (VLEs) or Learning Management Systems (LMSs). Software delivery tools such as AppsAnywhere also provide areas that can be used to communicate with students. Once BYOD is enabled, schools can be more confident that students are actively accessing digital academic resources through specific channels, and that communication propagated through those channels is much more likely to be seen.
Yes, it can do. While BYOD technologies may be expensive, with the correct provisioning and tools implemented, the decrease in hardware investment required from schools by allowing students to bring their own device and insight from reporting data can help schools save money on their software delivery.
BYOD policies in schools reduce the hardware investment of electronic devices, including mobile devices, needed for schools to offer equal access to digital academic resources to all students. By leveraging student-owned hardware, BYOD policies in schools can increase the resources available to students, such as software, digital media and digital learning environments, at a fraction of the cost of ensuring there are enough organization-owned machines for every student to use. Furthermore, BYOD allows students to access school resources outside of school and outside of teaching hours via their own device.
BYOD policies in schools help to introduce students to completing work from their own devices in preparation for higher education and employment. In an ever-more-digital world, getting used to using personal devices to complete work can help desensitize students to the potential distractions offered by those devices. BYOD can also help students learn to manage their time effectively in a society where the lines between work time and free time are becoming more and more blurred.
We’re excited to be releasing AppsAnywhere 3.0 in December 2022, in time for January enrolment. Your dedicated Customer Success team will be in touch when it’s available to ensure your institution gets the most out of AppsAnywhere.
To get the latest version if you are currently using AppsAnywhere, schedule a call with your specialist implementations team and we can help you to start benefiting from AppsAnywhere 2.12 now.
Most IT professionals get excited when considering new technologies and solutions. Without a doubt, the prospect of a VDI deployment project is likely to get your team’s juices flowing. However, deploying VDI is complex and often includes a host of new infrastructure and unique software management tools. The best advice is to engage with a vendor partner early on so that the design for your campus can be vetted by experts who work with VDI on a daily basis. A vendor partner can also help guide through different architecture scenarios, use cases, and potential pitfalls. All of the knowledge transfer gained will put the IT team in a far better position to successfully deploy and support VDI for your campus.
As is the theme throughout the rest of this article, there isn’t really an objective victor in DaaS vs. VDI. However, when it comes to Higher Ed, we rarely see full DaaS deployments. They’re often saved for more limited use cases, such as temporary BYOD access, or delivering to satellite campuses. For the scale of delivery required by HEIT, VDI will usually come out on top. However, you still need to decide whether to go for legacy VDI, or newer, hosted solutions…
DaaS refers to virtual desktops being provided to organizations as a service-based solution. It will include support for managing, upgrading and maintaining virtual machines. It is a more complete out-of-the-box solution with a price tag to match. Fully-hosted VDI is just like legacy VDI, except you don’t need on-premise server infrastructure, and they are often pay-as-you-go. Fully-hosted solutions are also referred to cloud-hosted solutions and they are the same as VDI, except hosted for you, as the name suggests.
Both VMware and Citrix have a robust product offering across many different solution suites. Historically, Citrix has excelled in the realm of remote app delivery or app remoting solutions. On the other hand, VMware leads the way with full desktop VDI delivery. Deciding on the right approach is solely dependent on the needs of the institution and what goals they are hoping to achieve with the project.
A formal BYOD policy helps to ensure a high chance of success and adoption as well as communicating practical information to users on how to interact with and use software on their BYO devices.
To put it concisely, a BYOD policy should include any or all of the following: Device type Operating system Available resources Security Usage conditions
A BYOD policy is a formal definition and agreement between the BYOD provider (universities) and the BYOD users (students). It is similar to an SLA (Service Level Agreement) between service-providers and outlines how users can expect to interact with their university's BYOD program, as well as any limitations, usage conditions, and compatibility information.
Sign up to our newsletter.
AppsAnywhere is a global education technology solution provider that challenges the notion that application access, delivery, and management must be complex and costly. AppsAnywhere is the only platform to reduce the technical barriers associated with hybrid teaching and learning, BYOD, and complex software applications, and deliver a seamless digital end-user experience for students and staff. Used by over 3 million students across 300+ institutions in 22 countries, AppsAnywhere is uniquely designed for education and continues to innovate in partnership with the education community and the evolving needs and expectations of students and faculty.
Register your interest for a demo and see how AppsAnywhere can help your institution. Receive a free consultation of your existing education software strategy and technologies, an overview of AppsAnywhere's main features and how they benefit students, faculty and IT, and get insight into the AppsAnywhere journey and post launch partnership support.
Register your interest for a demo and see how AppsAnywhere can help your institution. Receive a free consultation of your existing education software strategy and technologies, an overview of AppsAnywhere's main features and how they benefit students, faculty and IT, and get insight into the AppsAnywhere journey and post launch partnership support.