Requirements - Implementation of WTS (Windows
Terminal Server) in OS/2 environment
Every year approximately two thousand researchers at the
European Patent Office (EPO) are faced with the tremendous
challenge of judging over 120,000 applications on their merits.
Before a patent can be issued, however, the researchers have
to run through numerous files stored in the huge EPO archives.
With a growing number of applications requiring specific 32-bit
Windows software, for instance in the field of bio-chemistry,
the OS/2 operating system in use at EPO turned out to be outdated
and more and more unfit for its purpose.
Switching form OS/2 to a Windows environment all at once
was not only impossible, but would also make a number of applications
completely useless. At first, EPO solved the problem itself
by using Citrix technology and creating its own Windows Terminal
Server system. As this solution soon turned out to be very
promising the EPO decided to turn it into a robust and high-performance
architecture and a request was sent to several IT companies
in 1998 for proposals to set up this new WTS infrastructure.
In the end, COMPAREX was award-ed the assignment, with its
Dutch office as main contractor and its German office as sub-contractor.
International know-how
The fact that COMPAREX had already provided EPO with a number
of storage solutions was not entirely irrelevant but certainly
not decisive. Each project within EPO is submitted to the
same standard decision-making process which, in the case of
Server-based Computing, means that COMPAREX was just 'one
of the candidates'. According to project manager P. Niles,
who coordinated the entire project on behalf of EPO, it was
especially the expertise of COMPAREX as leading system integrator
that gave them an advantage over other competitors. "We were
actually quite impressed by the 'temporary' solution COMPAREX
had already implemented at a very early stage. There are not
really that many companies that can deal with these very complex
matters. And complex it was, with no less than 28 applications,
varying from financial to biochemical, to be transformed from
OS/2 to Windows and all requiring the same reliability! The
fact that COMPAREX was able to manage and maintain the entire
implementation all by itself, both in The Netherlands and
in Germany and including the supply of hardware and software,
was of vital importance, simply because the systems in Munich
and Rijswijk had to be completely identical."
TCO visibly reduced
While the applications still run under OS/2, the programs
appear on the familiar user interface (Windows). The COMPAREX
solution consists of two identical server farms, one in Germany
and another in The Netherlands, each farm containing three
servers. With two additional test servers, one for each location,
a total of eight servers was delivered, as well as all relevant
Microsoft and Citrix licences. Though the implementation may
appear to be expensive, costing EPO nearly EUR 1 million,
it saves EPO a considerable amount of money that would otherwise
need to be spent on a second desktop for each user. As the
WTS implementation is basically a form of Server-based Computing,
it will also reduce the TCO (Total Cost of Ownership). Both
software and hardware can now be administered and configured
from a central point. There is no longer any need to maintain
large numbers of different installations and program versions
or to carry out the time-consuming administration work locally.
This enables savings to be made on support, maintenance and
licences. In addition, the new system is extremely fast and
much more efficient than before, thanks to caching and load
balancing.
Commitment every step of the way
Niles is also very pleased about the cooperation during the
duration of the project. "The people at COMPAREX have put
a lot of effort in the WTS implementation and have proven
to be very reliable.
The WTS system has been operational in The Netherlands since
the end of 2000 and in Germany since March 2001, allowing
a total of one hundred users at each location to work with
the solution simultaneously. "What was meant as a temporary
solution, has resulted in a stable and strategic IT environment.
Recently, we even installed SAP GUI software, which runs smoothly
too. In 2002 we will switch to Windows 2000. Several of our
core applications still have to be adjusted, however, as have
a number of Windows applications. In other words, we will
still be working with COMPAREX for some time to come", says
the Swedish project manager.
Server-based Computing
Server-based Computing involves the centralised installation
and administration of operating systems and application software
on central servers. All applications run on the servers. The
clients linked to these servers provide only the screen information
and transfer user inputs. As a result, SBC leads to more efficient
management and control. Thanks to SBC, applications can also
be deployed and made accessible to users much faster and more
efficiently. In addition, it not only allows the use of thin
clients instead of regular desktop units, but also allows
older PCs to remain in use much longer, thus reducing the
investment costs of a company's ICT infrastructure and its
Total Cost of Ownership (TCO). Finally, SBC provides a multi-platform
desktop which can be used to run all kinds of application,
regardless of whether these are Windows, UNIX, Java or state-of-the-art
web-based applications.
European Patent Office (EPO)
Both private individuals and companies in Europe can turn
to their respective national patent offices to register and
protect their inventions. To qualify for protection, these
inventions need to be new, innovative and fit for industrial
production. To protect a concept or product throughout all
European countries, applications must be submitted to the
European Patent Office (EPO). In addition to its Munich headquarters,
EPO has several offices in a number of European countries.
With approximately 2,500 employees from 20 different countries,
the Dutch office in Rijswijk (near The Hague) is undoubtedly
one of the largest. In addition, EPO has smaller offices in
Vienna (80 employees) and Berlin (150 employees) which are
connected to Munich and Rijswijk by a WAN (Wide Area Network).
In order to adequately judge all 140,000 applications that
are filed each year, the 2,500 research workers at EPO have
access to an extensive archive containing no less than thirty
million patent files, divided into 120,000 categories, which
it has also been possible to access through the Internet since
the middle of 1998.