Citrix Online
Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Software |
Founded | 1989 |
Headquarters | Santa Barbara, California |
Key people | Brett Caine, President; Brian Donahoo, Vice President, Products and Client Services; Laura McCormick, Vice President, Communications; Heidi Wieland, Senior Manager |
Products | Thin Client Software, Remote Access, Terminal Services |
Website | http://www.citrixonline.com |
Citrix Online is a division of Citrix Systems, Inc. (Nasdaq: CTXS) that sells Web-based remote access, support, and collaboration software and services. Its products are GoToAssist, GoToMeeting, GoToMyPC, and GoToWebinar.
Citrix Online is considered a key example of the software as a service/application service provider software business model.[1][2]
The division is based in Santa Barbara, California.
History
Expertcity, Inc. was founded in 1997 by UCSB Professor Klaus Schauser and graduate students Bernd Oliver Christiansen and Malte Muenke.[3] Investors included Sun Microsystems, ZDNet, Bertelsmann Ventures, and Wit Capital.[4]
The company went live with a marketplace for technical support services, expertcity.com, in December, 1999.[5] A user of the site would submit a technical support question through a simple webform and receive Dutch auction bids from online experts to resolve the problem.[6] Upon selecting one of the experts, the user was connected to him via a chat interface and, optionally, via desktop sharing, whereby the expert could see the user's screen and remotely control the user's mouse and keyboard. This "remote desktop" technology formed the kernel of Citrix Online's later products.
Expertcity discontinued their support marketplace service on January 1, 2002 by transferring it to Tech24, Inc.[7] Tech24 subsequently phased out the service and transitioned to phone-based support.
The remote desktop technology behind the expertcity.com support marketplace enabled additional products. June 2000 saw the debut of DesktopStreaming (now GoToAssist), a corporate product that lets companies use desktop sharing for technical support between their own customers and support representatives.[8] GoToMyPC, which allows a user to remotely access his or her own desktop, followed in early 2001.
In 2003, Citrix Systems acquired Expertcity,[9] then a major player in Web-based desktop access, in a transaction valued at approximately $225 million in cash and stock. Expertcity became the Citrix Online division of Citrix and retained many of the key developers of the original company.
At the time of the acquisition, Expertcity was developing GoToMeeting, a product that uses the remote desktop engine to allow multiple users to view and control a single desktop, enabling both collaborative support and collaborative presentations. In 2006, Citrix Online adapted GoToMeeting to support the growing market for Web-based training and Web-based seminars. The resulting GoToWebinar product allows up to 1000 attendees to view a single session and join in a phone conference.
External links
References
- ^ Vizard, Michael. "Citrix Commissions Partners For Software-As-A-Service", CRN, August 05 2005
- ^ "Software-as-a-Service: HyperGrowth Model or Hype?", DM Review, April 23 2007
- ^ Citrix Online management team
- ^ "Expertcity.com Secures $30 Million in Latest Round of Funding from Sun Microsystems, ZDNet, Bertelsmann Ventures and Wit Capital's Arista Capital Partners, LP", Expertcity press release, December 2 1999
- ^ Schwartz, Ephraim. "Start-Ups to Put Tech-Support Services Up for Bid", Computerworld, May 1 2000
- ^ Review of Expertcity.com, DisabledPerson.com
- ^ "Expertcity Transfers Its Award-Winning ExpertLive Marketplace for Services to Tech24, Inc.", Expertcity press release, December 17 2001
- ^ "Expertcity.com’s DesktopStreaming Success Leads to Launch of New ASP Division", Expertcity press release, June 28 2000
- ^ "Citrix to Acquire Expertcity, Leader in Web-Based Desktop Access with GoToMyPC and GoToAssist", Citrix press release, December 18 2003