A few days ago, traveling between our offices in Mexico City and Bogota, I opened my laptop in a waiting area and, within seconds, had in front of me exactly the same desktop I use every day: my applications, my files, my access. I didn't download anything to the machine, I didn't copy documents onto a USB stick, and I left no trace of sensitive information on a device that wasn't mine. That is, in essence, what a virtual desktop does. At SUMāTO we have long been convinced that the way we understand "the work computer" is changing, and I want to explain why I believe VDI is moving from a technical curiosity to a strategic decision.
In short: VDI (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure) means your work desktop stops living on the physical machine and instead runs centrally in the data center or in the cloud. You access it from almost any device, while the data stays protected in the data center. The result is more security, simpler management, and real mobility.
Traditionally, your operating system, your programs, and your files live inside the computer in front of you. If that machine is lost, damaged, or stolen, all of that content goes with it. Desktop virtualization flips the model: the operating system and applications run on centralized servers, and what the user sees on screen is essentially an image of that desktop running somewhere else.
The device you work from -a laptop, a lightweight desktop, even a tablet- becomes a window onto that desktop, not the place where the information resides. The connection transmits the screen, keyboard, and mouse; the processing and the data stay in the data center.
The underlying question isn't technical, it's about control. When a hundred people work on a hundred independent computers, you have a hundred places where something can fail, a hundred scattered copies of information, and a hundred different configurations to maintain. Centralizing gives you back control over a single point.
For me, this is the most powerful argument. In the traditional model, every device is a potential leak: a laptop left in a taxi can become a serious information breach. With virtual desktops, the device that is lost doesn't hold the information, because it never left the data center.
Of course, this requires taking the protection of the central environment seriously. That's why I always recommend approaching a VDI project alongside a solid cybersecurity strategy, where identity, access, and monitoring are designed from day one.
Anyone who has managed a fleet of computers knows the grind: updating them one by one, tending to different configurations, reinstalling entire machines when something breaks. Virtualization simplifies much of that work.
The promise of "working from anywhere" gets repeated a lot, but with virtual desktops it takes on a concrete meaning. Your work environment follows you without depending on any particular physical machine.
All of this rests on a solid infrastructure foundation. When that foundation leans on cloud services, the organization gains the ability to grow or adjust without having to buy and maintain its own servers for every new need.
VDI isn't a one-size-fits-all recipe, but there are scenarios where its value is especially clear:
At SUMāTO we developed GaleónVDI as our virtual desktop solution, designed for organizations in the region that want to take the step toward a centralized model without losing the close support a project like this requires. I like the idea behind the name: a galleon carried what was valuable safely across long voyages; our goal is for your information to travel protected while your people gain the freedom to work from wherever they need to.
Rather than selling a technology, we aim to design the complete model: sizing the environment, the security strategy, cloud integration, and the adoption plan so that people experience it as an improvement and not an obstacle.
Does VDI work without an internet connection?
The model depends on the connection to the centralized desktop, so it requires connectivity to work online. Part of the design is precisely planning the quality and redundancy of the link according to each operation's needs.
Do I need to replace all the computers?
Not necessarily. One advantage of the model is that many existing devices can continue to serve as access points, since the processing happens on the server and not on the user's machine.
Is it the same as having my files in the cloud?
No. Storing files in the cloud solves storage; VDI moves the entire desktop -its operating system and its applications- to the data center, not just the documents.
What about security if I lose the device?
Because the data lives in the data center and not on the device, losing it doesn't mean losing the information. Access can be revoked centrally.
If the idea of giving your team the freedom to work from anywhere, without sacrificing control over the information, resonates with you as much as it does with me, let's talk. At SUMāTO we can help you assess whether GaleónVDI fits your reality and design a realistic path to adoption. Reach out through our contact page and let's take that first step together.