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There is a familiar tension in distributed IT. The more geographically spread out a team gets, the harder consistent and secure device management becomes. Security vulnerabilities multiply, hardware costs rise, and IT teams end up perpetually reactive. This is no longer a niche concern for only some types of companies, mind you. In the U.S., 52% of employees work in hybrid arrangements, and 26% are fully remote, observes Gallup. The traditional endpoint model was never designed for this. By centralizing virtual desktops inside data centers and cloud platforms, Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) gives teams uniform, secure access without any need to manage individual endpoint environments. Here’s a practical breakdown of how VDI solves the core challenges that IT teams face with distributed teams today. Centralized Management If you have ever watched an IT team scramble to push a critical update across endpoints in five different time zones, you already understand the appeal here. VDI solutions eliminate that scramble almost entirely, because instead of chasing devices across locations, admins manage everything from one centrally hosted console. Updates, applications, ...