Vsystems Cloud Workspaces

Secure, scalable virtual desktops for modern hybrid and remote workforces

Updated April 2, 2026

Vsystems Cloud Workspaces Overview

Vsystems Cloud Workspaces is a managed virtual desktop infrastructure solution designed for secure, flexible remote work. It enables organizations to deliver full desktop experiences on any device while reducing on‑premises hardware.

Due to its high availability, strong security controls, and enterprise partnerships, the service is customized to each business’s performance, compliance, and scalability needs.

Key Features

  • Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI): Deliver full Windows desktops securely from the cloud to any supported device.
  • High Availability by Default: Built‑in redundancy and uptime architecture provided as a standard, not an add‑on.
  • Flexible User Models: Support for dedicated or floating desktops with multiple clone and assignment options.
  • Enterprise‑Grade Security: MFA, compliant data centers, and optional advanced threat detection.
  • Scalable Cloud Resources: Easily adjust compute and storage as workforce needs change.
  • Carrier‑Grade Connectivity: High‑bandwidth, redundant networking with Verizon and T‑Mobile partnerships.

Pricing

You need to contact sales for custom price.

Pros

Competitor

Pros

Amazon WorkSpaces Compared to Amazon WorkSpaces, Vsystems offers more hands‑on management and customization. Businesses benefit from tailored architectures, included high availability, and direct human support, reducing operational overhead and complexity for teams without deep cloud expertise.
Citrix DaaS Vsystems is typically easier to deploy and manage than Citrix, with fewer licensing layers. Organizations gain predictable monthly pricing, managed infrastructure, and less need for specialized Citrix administrators.
VMware Horizon Unlike VMware Horizon’s infrastructure‑heavy approach, Vsystems provides a fully managed service. This lowers upfront costs and accelerates time to value while still supporting enterprise‑grade performance and availability.
Microsoft Azure Virtual Desktop Vsystems reduces the learning curve of Azure Virtual Desktop by managing optimization, security, and performance tuning. Customers avoid the trial‑and‑error costs often associated with self‑managed Azure deployments.
V2 Cloud Compared to V2 Cloud’s standardized plans, Vsystems excels in bespoke configurations, compliance‑driven environments, and complex enterprise requirements where customization and direct support matter more than simplicity.

Cons

Competitor

Cons

Amazon WorkSpaces Compared to Amazon WorkSpaces’ transparent pay‑as‑you‑go pricing, Vsystems lacks public pricing, which can slow early budgeting and require sales engagement before cost comparisons are possible.
Citrix DaaS Citrix offers a broader global ecosystem and third‑party integrations. Vsystems may feel more limited for organizations already heavily invested in Citrix‑specific tooling.
VMware Horizon VMware Horizon provides deeper native integration for existing VMware data centers. Vsystems may not appeal as strongly to teams wanting full internal control over the virtualization stack.
Microsoft Azure Virtual Desktop Azure Virtual Desktop can be cheaper at small scale with in‑house expertise. Vsystems’ managed model may cost more for technically mature teams that prefer self‑service control.
V2 Cloud V2 Cloud publishes clear entry‑level pricing and faster self‑signup. Vsystems’ sales‑led onboarding can feel slower for small businesses seeking immediate deployment.