Monday, October 29, 2007

Is Fibre Channel dead?

Network World

Daily News: PM




Network World Daily News: PM, 10/29/07

In depth

Is Fibre Channel dead?
Fibre Channel is the king of enterprise storage-area-network technologies. iSCSI, however, is the heir apparent. When it comes to new SANs, add-ons to existing systems or departmental-level installations at large enterprises that have Fibre Channel, customers increasingly are choosing iSCSI.

The evolution of antivirus software
Reports about the death of traditional signature-based antivirus software are premature. As the threat landscape evolves, so too must antivirus software to provide both signature- and behavioral-based protection. Effective endpoint security must also incorporate technologies such as endpoint firewall, host intrusion prevention and network access control.

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NetworkWorld.com Community

New bloggers: Ross Mistry, co-author of "Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Management and Administration," will be blogging on SQL Server and Windows Server 2008 issues. Chris Amaris, who works with Windows Server 2008, Operations Manager 2007, Configuration Manager 2007, Exchange 2007 and SQL 2005, will be blogging on network and systems management issues. Jeff Helm wishes hotel chains could get on the ball and provide consistently decent Internet access. Users debate WAN optimization and branch routers and Cisco vs. Juniper. They also consider the enterprise implications of Facebook. Some users still love OS/2. James Gaskin compares Leopard and Vista. John Obeto explains why Vista is the best client OS in the universe. Greg Royal sighs about more Microsoft plug-in nightmares. Tyson Kopczynski continues his look at using PowerShell to take virtual server snapshots.

Chris Dalby looks at Live Search for BlackBerry. Alex Lewis talks about running OCS 2007 in a 64-bit world. Susan Hanley wonders if we can ban folders from SharePoint deployments.

Paul McNamara examines the controversy over Comcast and alleged blocking of packets based on application (including Lotus Notes). Dave Schulz helps you begin your journey into IP telephony. Michael Morris sure hopes you're doing network capacity management. Kerrie Meyler compares agent and agentless monitoring. Brad Reese discusses FBI action against people charged with trying to defraud Cisco. Channelguy details changes in Cisco Capital's leasing program. Jamey Heary explains the Common Vulnerability Scoring System. Raj Tolani shows how to limit your VTY access. Mark Gibbs notices efforts to fight smalltime spammers.

Review

HP's 'shorty' blade server takes fresh approach
Is HP's BladeSystem c3000 Enclosure a blade server, or is it a modular, server put into a 6U rack profile? It's a bit of both. We take it out for a spin and let you know how it does.

How to

Ron Nutter helps a user get a laptop to connect to access points again. Rich Mogull explains how to make sense of data-loss prevention. Jeff Prince discusses whether NAC is worth it.

More news

T. Rowe goes 2.0
These days T. Rowe Price vice president Kirk Kness is busy implementing relatively low-cost, Web 2.0-based collaboration tools including wikis and blogs.

Presence comes to P&G
When your CEO challenges you to create the world's most collaborative company, you'd best take some definitive steps in that direction.

Building virtual worlds at Boeing
Want to see how an F-16 will react to the latest antiaircraft weapons? Tip Slater is your man.

Despite Cisco's play, WiMAX has long way to go
Cisco's buy of WiMAX vendor Navini shows the network giant sees broadband wireless access as a key technology. Just don't expect it to blossom overnight.

Seven enterprise IT start-ups grab new funding
A look at seven enterprise technology innovators that received significant venture capital during the third quarter of 2007.

Storm worm can befuddle NAC
A newly discovered capability of the Storm worm could invalidate results churned out by NAC products, attendees at Interop New York learned last week.

Oracle and BEA: What happens next?
BEA Systems has rejected Oracle's $6.7 billion purchase offer. What happens next is anyone's guess.

Payment-card security standards for wireless and Web applications debated
Proposed new security standards governing wireless and applications from the Payment Card Industry Security Standards Council are stirring debate among merchants still struggling with PCI compliance on existing security standards.

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MOST-READ REVIEW:
HP's 'shorty' blade server takes fresh approach


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Questions? Feedback? Contact NetworkWorld.com Site Editor Jeff Caruso.



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