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Friday, December 21, 2012

Cisco sacrificing one for another?

  Cisco uses LISP to articulate programmability | Software-defined networks need better traffic visibility
 
  Network World Cisco

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Cisco sacrificing one for another?
Just as Cisco is reportedly looking to shed its Linksys home router business, which it acquired in 2003 for $500 million, more speculation surfaces that the company may make an even bigger splash in an effort to energize growth. Bloomberg reports that Cisco's appetite for growth-through-expansion means that storage player NetApp, virtualization partner Citrix and cloud provid Read More


RESOURCE COMPLIMENTS OF: AT&T

Top 10 Considerations for cloud computing
As business users push for faster and easier ways to roll out applications, cloud usage is on the rise. As a result, many cloud projects are initiated outside the realm of IT – without the clear requirements or measurable objectives. "Top 10 Considerations for Cloud Computing" provides a checklist for taking a more strategic approach to cloud. Download your complementary checklist

WEBCAST: Navisite

Desktops as a Service: Sorting Fact From Fiction
This webcast looks at the realities of taking desktops to the cloud in a reliable, manageable way. It explores the role of virtualization and hosted services while examining the intricacies of Microsoft licensing. It's a must-see event for anyone looking to leverage the realities of DaaS. View now.

Cisco uses LISP to articulate programmability
Network virtualization is one of the hotter trends in the industry today, and when Cisco speaks to it you hear a distinct LISP. Read More

Software-defined networks need better traffic visibility
Most of the focus of software-defined networks (SDNs) has been on how it impacts the layer 2/3 switch vendors. The industry seems to have moved off of this notion that it commoditizes the underlying infrastructure, but recently another question has come up. Big Switch recently launched the company and related products, one of which is called "Big Tap," that provide traffic visibility functionality... Read More


WEBCAST: Meru Networks

Impact of 802.11ac on WLAN
In this webinar, industry expert Craig Mathias and Robert Crisp from Meru Networks will discuss the impact 802.11ac will have on enterprise WLAN networks and how to best prepare for it. Learn more.

NASA on full court press to deflate doomsday prophecies
Insidious unknown planets lurking behind the sun ready to slam into Earth, supernova set to engulf the planet and giant, unseen asteroids screaming toward our globe are all theories espoused across the Internet as to how we will meet our demise next week on 12/21/2012. Read More

33 Best & Worst Celebrity Tech Moments of 2012
Playing Steve Jobs, Gaga over social networking and more tech endorsements than you can shake an iPhone at Read More


WHITE PAPER: HP

Building modern, virtualization-optimized data centers
HP offers a flexible, virtualization-optimized data center network architecture that requires far fewer devices, interconnections, layers, and discrete appliances. HP Networking solutions streamline network operations and accelerate application and service delivery; reduce space, power, cooling, and capital requirements. View Now

10 of the most useful cloud databases
Big data is becoming a big deal and cloud providers want to be the place where enterprises databases live. Read More

Addressing WAN packet loss – borrowing from the CDN/ADN world
We continue our discussion of what can be done to address the impact of packet loss on application performance over the WAN. We've covered three of the six different possibilities listed in the first column of this arc. Read More

INSIDER
Citrix: What kind of company is it anyway?
Citrix is many different things to many people. It's a cloud company, it's a virtualization player, it's a mobile technologies vendor and it's a collaboration products provider. But according to Mark Templeton, Citrix CEO since 2001, all of that blends together and fits with where enterprise IT shops are headed. Here, speaking with IDG Enterprise Chief Content Officer John Gallant, Templeton dishes on Citrix's overall strategy, its relationships with Cisco, Microsoft and Apple, its rivalry with VMware, and its controversial take on open source cloud computing. Read More

Boeing uses 20,000 lbs. of potatoes to check aircraft wireless network signals
Boeing calls it Project SPUDS or rather Synthetic Personnel Using Dielectric Substitution - that is, using sacks of potatoes perched on aircraft seats to test the effectiveness of wireless signal in an airliner cabin. Boeing said it was researching an advanced way to test wireless signals in airplane and needed a way to effectively simulate say 200-300 people sitting in seats throughout the aircraft.... Read More

 
 
 

SLIDESHOWS

10 technologies that disappointed in 2012
Here are 10 technologies that fell short of expectations in 2012.

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