Asia Online Puts New Twist into ASP Tale
- 21 August, 2000 12:01
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AUCKLAND (08/21/2000) - In a twist on the ASP (application service provider) model, Internet service provider Asia Online Inc. will rent thin-client dedicated terminals as well as applications when it launches an ASP service here in October.
Asia Online has already broken into the ASP market in Hong Kong where its service, CenoSuite, offers desktop productivity services to the small and medium-sized business market.
The general manager of Asia Online New Zealand (formerly ICONZ), Hugh McKellar, says it will start hosting CenoSuite locally in two months, initially offering Microsoft Corp. Office. Since CenoSuite, running on Citrix Inc.'s MetaFrame, emulates a Windows 2000 environment, users will be spared the need to upgrade their operating suite to Windows 2000 in order to run the latest version of office, says McKellar.
He says pricing has not yet been worked out but in Hong Kong CenoSuite is charging customers a flat monthly fee of HK$400 (US$51) a user for the Office 2000 service. That compares to Telecom-EDS-Microsoft venture esolutions last week offered Microsoft Office and Exchange and security services for NZ$155 (US$70) per user per month.
CenoSuite will also offer other products and is talking to software suppliers in the areas of accounting, human resources, management, enterprise resource planning, CRM and e-commerce.
Apart from applications Asia Online will also rent out a thin-client appliance dubbed CenoStation. Produced by X-terminal manufacturer Wyse Technology, the appliance will act as a set-top box accessing the ASP via an Internet connection and dedicated to running CenoSuite applications.
In Hong Kong, CenoStation, equipped with a built-in modem, fast ethernet connection, sound ports, keyboard, mouse and 15-inch monitor, rents for HK$600 per month. In a third option the ISP will also rent out and support Dell PCs as part of the package.
The CenoStation offering, which will be cheaper than the PC option, will dramatically lower the total cost of ownership, says McKellar.
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