[3] From 2006 to 2009, Code Systems Corporation developed Xenocode, one of the first application virtualization engines for the Windows platform.
Turbo.net virtual applications run in isolated sandboxes Products include web development and testing tools such as Browser Sandbox, Browser Studio.Free accounts allow users to stream hundreds of brand-name applications like Skype, Chrome, and Firefox without installing them.
[10] The app library is part of Turbo’s free basic account and lets anyone stream and use full desktop applications like Skype, Google Chrome, VLC media player, Sublime Text, Notepad++, and GIMP without installing them.
Users with Turbo’s plugin can press [Alt+Win] to bring up the Spoon Console, which acts as an alternate Start menu that can launch both local and virtualized applications and files.
Turbo Studio emulates the operating system features that are necessary for applications to run and therefore reduces resource overhead.
Deployment models include standalone EXE, MSI package, and HTTP-based delivery via the Turbo browser plugin.
End users log into a website from any browser and are able to launch and use desktop-level applications like Microsoft Word and Photoshop without having to install them.
Turbo (formerly Spoonium) is a platform of tools that allows users to package Windows desktop applications and their dependencies into software containers.
Application containers made with Turbo can run on any Windows machine without installers, app breaks, or dependencies.
System administrators can reduce failures due to differences in development, testing, production, and end-user environments.