NERDIO GUIDE
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NERDIO GUIDE
Carisa Stringer | February 24, 2026
Table of Contents
This guide is designed for IT leaders and virtualization engineers seeking to modernize their application delivery stack by transitioning from complex, legacy VDI layering tools to a cloud-native, agile approach using MSIX App Attach.
We explore the technical hurdles of traditional platforms like Citrix and VMware Horizon and provide a factual roadmap for simplification through automation and Microsoft-native technologies.
Note: Content referencing Citrix and Omnissa products and pricing is based on these companies’ websites, current as of the last article update. Given the rapid pace of price and software updates, readers should always verify current features and version details directly with the vendor. For the latest product details and further inquiries, please consult the official Citrix and Omnissa websites.
Legacy VDI platforms like Citrix and Horizon are facing a crossroads as organizations move to cloud-native environments. This evolution often requires a deep dive into how legacy monitoring and management tools, such as Citrix Director, compare to the streamlined AVD experience provided by Nerdio. Traditional application management, reliant on complex layering and static packaging, has become a bottleneck for IT agility.
Modernizing this stack requires a shift toward MSIX App Attach, which decouples applications from the OS. This transition reduces image sprawl, simplifies updates, and lowers total cost of ownership (TCO). By adopting a cloud-first approach with tools like Nerdio, IT teams can automate these complex migrations and reclaim operational efficiency.
Maintaining traditional VDI environments often involves juggling multiple proprietary management consoles and high-maintenance infrastructure components. As your organization scales, the technical debt of these "heavy" platforms can lead to significant operational fatigue and ballooning costs.
Legacy architectures require a massive footprint of dedicated servers for brokers, gateways, and load balancers. This leads to:
The shift toward subscription-based, often opaque licensing models by legacy vendors has created unpredictability for IT budgets. Many organizations find themselves "locked in" to expensive bundles that include features they don't use, whereas a transition to Microsoft-native solutions often allows for the reuse of existing Microsoft 365 licenses.
Traditional layering technologies like VMware App Volumes or Citrix App Layering were revolutionary a decade ago, but they were built for a different era of computing. Today, these tools often introduce more complexity than they solve, specifically when it comes to "dirty" operating systems and version conflicts.
The following table summarizes the technical differences between how legacy platforms handle apps versus the modern cloud-native approach.
| Feature | Legacy App Layering (Citrix/Horizon) | Modern MSIX App Attach |
|---|---|---|
| Storage Format | Proprietary Virtual Disks (VHD/VMDK) | Native VHDX or CimFS (CIM) |
| OS Integration | Modifies Registry & File System | Virtual "Mount" (No OS changes) |
| Update Cycle | High (Requires re-sealing images) | Low (Dynamic version swapping) |
| Host Impact | High (Agent overhead) | Minimal (Native Windows process) |
| Conflict Risk | High (Registry collisions) | Low (Containerized isolation) |
While transitioning to modern application delivery, organizations must also address the common legacy VDI configuration issues that often plague traditional Citrix or Horizon environments and hinder overall performance.n environments and hinder overall performance.
What is "registry rot" and how does it affect VDI?
Traditional app delivery "installs" components into the OS registry, which can lead to performance degradation over time.
While tools like Liquidware FlexApp provide advanced layering, they add another layer of licensing and expertise. Relying on multiple third-party agents increases the attack surface and complicates the troubleshooting process when a user reports a slow login or a broken application. Because Microsoft is ending support for App-V server components in April 2026, organizations still relying on this legacy virtualization technology must prioritize migrating their packages to MSIX App Attach to ensure continued management and security.
MSIX App Attach is the modern standard for delivering applications in virtual environments, specifically designed to solve the "image sprawl" problem. It represents a paradigm shift from installing applications to "attaching" them as virtualized containers. MSIX App Attach is natively supported across modern multi-session and single-session environments, including Windows 10 Enterprise, ensuring that organizations can maintain a consistent application delivery model during their transition to the cloud.
Unlike traditional installations, MSIX App Attach stores an application in a virtual disk (VHDX or CIM) that is mounted to the user session at logon.
Microsoft introduced the Composite Image File System (CimFS) to optimize App Attach for scale. Mounting and unmounting CimFS images is significantly faster than VHDX and consumes less CPU and memory.
| Metric | VHDX (Virtual Hard Disk) | CimFS (Composite Image File System) |
|---|---|---|
| Read/Write Mode | Read/Write | Read-Only (Optimized for Multi-session) |
| Mount Speed | Standard | Ultra-Fast (Reduced metadata overhead) |
| CPU/RAM Usage | Moderate | Very Low |
| Best Use Case | Single-user desktops / Testing | Large-scale AVD / Multi-session hosts |
| Complexity | Low (Standard disk format) | Moderate (Requires conversion step) |
Migration is not just about moving files; it’s about modernizing your entire workflow. Success depends on a methodical approach that prioritizes application compatibility and user experience.
Before moving, you must determine which apps are suitable for MSIX. Modernizing your app packaging workflow is a critical prerequisite for migration, as it involves converting static installers into dynamic MSIX containers that can be managed independently of the base operating system.
Moving to MSIX App Attach requires setting up a cloud-native infrastructure.
To achieve "best-in-class" performance, you must optimize how applications are staged and registered. This ensures that the user experience is indistinguishable from a physical PC.
Because MSIX packages are containers, they are inherently more secure. However, you must still manage the "chain of trust." Using a centralized management plane like Nerdio allows you to distribute certificates to thousands of session hosts automatically, ensuring that security never becomes a bottleneck for deployment. To maintain full visibility during this shift, leveraging Intune reporting ensures that IT teams can monitor application compliance and health across all managed endpoints from a single pane of glass.
Nerdio Manager for Enterprise (NME) acts as the "orchestration engine" that turns complex, script-heavy Microsoft tasks into simple, automated workflows. It is specifically designed to help organizations leave behind the baggage of legacy VDI and move toward Unified Application Management (UAM).
To understand how this modernization works, it helps to visualize a Unified Application Management (UAM) framework. This model consolidates fragmented app sources into a singular orchestration hub.

This hub-and-spoke model simplifies your IT operations by focusing on three key stages:
The table below illustrates the shift from manual, error-prone processes to the automated workflows provided by Nerdio.
| Management Task | Manual MSIX Workflow | Automated Nerdio Workflow |
|---|---|---|
| Package Creation | Manual VM setup & packaging tool | One-click automated VM provisioning |
| Code Signing | Manual certificate injection | Automated enterprise cert distribution |
| VHDX/CIM Expansion | Manual PowerShell scripts | Automated "One-Click" expansion |
| Version Swapping | Manual de-staging & re-staging | Automated version management & rollout |
| Host Assignment | Group Policy or Scripting | Drag-and-drop console interface |
Nerdio removes the manual labor of packaging apps. When you upload an installer, Nerdio:
Organizations using Nerdio to manage their AVD and MSIX environments typically see:
Real-world example: Large-scale enterprises utilize Nerdio to modernize their end-user computing and escape the high costs of legacy VDI. Carvana achieved a fully functional deployment in just 14 days, resulting in a 50% reduction in Azure costs and a significant increase in operational efficiency. (Carvana case study).
See how you can optimize processes, improve security, increase reliability, and save up to 70% on Microsoft Azure costs.
MSIX App Attach is a modern application delivery technology that decouples applications from the underlying operating system. Instead of being installed locally, applications are stored in virtualized containers (VHDX or CIM) that are dynamically "attached" to a user's session at logon. This allows applications to behave as if they are natively installed while keeping the base OS image lean and pristine.
Traditional VDI relied heavily on "golden images" and complex layering, which frequently led to "image sprawl" and significant administrative overhead for every update or patch. These methods often caused performance bottlenecks, such as slow login times and registry conflicts, while requiring high upfront infrastructure costs to manage proprietary brokers and gateways. Furthermore, manual intervention was typically required to re-seal images whenever a single application needed a minor update.
Application groups in Azure Virtual Desktop (AVD) are logical groupings used to manage and gate access to resources within a host pool. There are two primary types: Desktop, which provides users with a full Windows desktop experience, and RemoteApp, which publishes individual applications to the user. Administrators assign users or groups to these application groups to determine exactly which apps or desktops appear in the user’s feed.
Automation tools like PowerShell and Azure CLI allow IT teams to script the entire lifecycle of an application, from conversion and code signing to staging and registration. While some may use basic PowerShell, Nerdio provides a more enterprise-grade framework for Intune script deployment compared to more limited community tools, allowing for sophisticated, automated application lifecycle management. By using command-line utilities like msixmgr within automated pipelines, organizations can consistently expand MSIX packages into disk images and assign them to thousands of users at scale without manual portal clicks. These tools also enable the creation of automated logon/logoff scripts that manage the mounting and unmounting of application disks, ensuring resource efficiency.
Legacy manual installs required IT staff to log into individual images or servers to perform updates, a process that was both time-consuming and prone to human error. This "hand-managed" approach created significant technical debt, as maintaining inconsistent configurations across different departments drained budgets and pulled engineers away from strategic innovation. Scaling these environments often required a linear increase in headcount just to keep up with the volume of maintenance and troubleshooting tickets.
The migration process begins with auditing your application portfolio and converting legacy installers (like .msi or .exe) into the signed MSIX format. Once packaged, you must use a tool like MSIXMGR to "expand" these packages into a virtual disk format (VHDX or CIM) and upload them to a centralized storage solution like Azure Files. Finally, you register the packages in your AVD environment, configure the necessary permissions for session host computer accounts, and assign the applications to the appropriate host pools and user groups.
Carisa Stringer
Head of Product Marketing
Carisa Stringer is the Head of Product Marketing at Nerdio, where she leads the strategy and execution of go-to-market plans for the company’s enterprise and managed service provider solutions. She joined Nerdio in 2025, bringing 20+ years of experience in end user computing, desktops-as-a-service, and Microsoft technologies. Prior to her current role, Carisa held key product marketing positions at Citrix and Anthology, where she contributed to innovative go-to-market initiatives. Her career reflects a strong track record in driving growth and adoption in the enterprise technology sector. Carisa holds a Bachelor of Science in Industrial Engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology.