Managing computer infrastructure at a university is a fundamentally different challenge from K–12. Different faculties run different software. Labs are spread across multiple buildings on different network segments. Departmental needs shift every semester. The scale and complexity can be overwhelming.
EVO Cloud's multi-node architecture was designed for exactly this environment.
Each node functions simultaneously as a boot point and a restore point. Individual departments can maintain their own dedicated software environments — the engineering faculty's CAD workstations, the business school's office suites, the library's public terminals — while IT staff manage everything from a single, unified console. No separate systems. No duplicated effort.
Cross-subnet management means that regardless of how many buildings or network segments a campus spans, every computer appears in the same management interface. IT administrators can view device status, push deployments, and perform remote operations across the entire institution without leaving their desk.
At the end of each semester, updating environments is equally straightforward. IT staff create a new node, configure the required software environment, and deploy it campus-wide through P2P transfer in a single operation — a process that once took days now takes hours.
Universities that have deployed EVO Cloud regularly report that a single IT administrator can comfortably manage 500 or more computers. For institutions facing ongoing pressure to do more with fewer resources, that kind of operational efficiency is transformative.