Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Software-defined networking explained in 10 easy steps

Cisco CEO: We will become the No. 1 IT company | Internet traffic jams, meet your robot nemesis

InfoWorld Technology: Networking

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SDN 101: Software-defined networking explained in 10 easy steps
SDN is a network architecture that changes how we design, manage, and operate the entire network so that changes to the network become practical and reliable. Here's what you need to know about it. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Network Instruments

Getting Ahead Managing VoIP and Videoconferencing
Can the move to UC be just another simple technology transition? End users expect these technologies to look, act and behave just as their non-IP predecessors. But for IT teams it brings very real, new requirements. Learn VoIP and video success strategies from Jim Frey, an Enterprise Management Associates analyst. Learn more.

WHITE PAPER: Riverbed Technology

Consolidating Remote Servers and Storage for Security
A new kind of storage architecture allows IT to consolidate remote servers and data in the data center by decoupling storage from its server over any distance--even thousands of miles--and still get the same performance as if the storage remained local to the branch. Read more >>

INSIDER
Cisco CEO: We will become the No. 1 IT company
Think software-defined networking will change the industry? You're thinking way too small, according to Cisco CEO John Chambers. In Cisco's strategy, SDN is just a single element in a holistic architecture. Read More

Internet traffic jams, meet your robot nemesis
On an 80-core computer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, scientists have built a tool that might make networks significantly faster just by coming up with better algorithms. Read More

Cisco releases security patches for Unified Communications Manager
Cisco Systems released a security patch for its Unified Communications Manager (Unified CM) enterprise telephony product in order to mitigate an attack that could allow hackers to take full control of the systems. Read More

W3C rejects ad industry attempt to hijack do-not-track specs
The World Wide Web Consortium has rejected an attempt by the advertising industry to hijack a specification describing how websites should respond to "do not track" requests sent by Web browsers. Read More


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