Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Adaptive learning creates more effective training

Juniper hones product development for cloud, intelligent networks | FTC taking robocall death hunt to DEFCON

Network World Cisco

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Cisco buys its way into AT&T SDN
Cisco this week announced its intent to acquire privately held Tail-f Systems, a developer of multivendor network service orchestration systems for traditional and virtualized networks, and one of the vendors AT&T selected for its Domain 2.0 SDN/NFV project. Under the terms of the agreement, Cisco will pay $175 million in cash and retention-based incentives in exchange for all shares of Tail-f, which is based in Stockholm. + MORE ON NETWORK WORLD: SDN seen slowing spending on routers, switches +To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More


WHITE PAPER: Aerohive

BYOD and Beyond: How To Turn BYOD into Productivity
One of the most overlooked aspects of the BYOD phenomenon isn't just connecting the users to the network, but how to manage them once they're there. Getting mobile and BYO devices onto the network is now table stakes. View Now

WHITE PAPER: Dell

Achieve Deeper Network Security and Application Control
Next-generation firewalls (NGFWs) have emerged to revolutionize network security as we once knew it. Yet to safeguard an organization from today's ever-evolving threats, NGFWs must be able to deliver an even deeper level of network security. View Now

Juniper hones product development for cloud, intelligent networks
Juniper Networks combined its hardware and software units to better align product development and share technology across products lines for cloud and intelligent networking.By merging its Platform Systems Division and Software Solutions Division into the Juniper Development and Innovation business unit (JDI), Juniper can eliminate unnecessary organizational barriers in the company and build end-to-end systems that “crush operational expense” through automation, optimization and analytics, says Rami Rahim, executive vice president of the JDI. Rahim’s discussion with Network World is one of the first a high-ranking Juniper executive has granted since formation of the JDI.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More


WHITE PAPER: Network Instruments

4 Key Survival Tips for Planning Your Next Big Data Project
Big Data projects slam network performance. This paper offer survival tips to prepare your network before the Big Data projects hit, not after. Learn how to monitor and manage network performance for bandwidth, consistent low latency, scalable storage, processing power and security. Learn More

FTC taking robocall death hunt to DEFCON
The Federal Trade Commission is taking its fight against robocallers to the upcoming DEFCON by challenging attendees of the conference to build the ultimate “honeypot” that would lure in and identify illegal phone spammers.  The FTC said a robocall honeypot is an information system designed to attract robocallers, which can help experts and law enforcement authorities understand and combat illegal calls. The FTC has noted that the vast majority of telephone calls that deliver a prerecorded message trying to sell something to the recipient are illegal. The agency regulates these calls under the Telemarketing Sales Rule.  +More on Network World: Daunting photos of a village built to handle electronic waste; Old electronics don’t die, they pile up+To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More


WEBCAST: Ipswitch, Inc

4 Ways Network Monitoring Improves Wireless Networks
Originally deployed as a 'network of convenience', wireless is rapidly evolving into the primary network for more users and many more devices than planned. Join this interactive session to learn the four key drivers for successful review and deployment of wireless networks. Learn More

Crowdsourcing moving beyond the fringe
Bob Brown, Network World Depending up on how you look at it, crowdsourcing is all the rage these days -- think Wikipedia, X Prize and Kickstarter -- or at the other extreme, greatly underused.  To the team behind the new “insight network” Yegii, crowdsourcing has not nearly reached its potential despite having its roots as far back as the early 1700s and a famous case of the British Government seeking a solution to “The Longitude Problem” in order to make sailing less life threatening. (I get the impression that mention of this example is obligatory at any crowdsourcing event.)To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More

Better messaging means security can grow with IoT
Messaging veteran RTI delivers software based on the new DDS Security standard Read More


SLIDESHOWS

10 reasons why open source is eating the world

Here are 10 reasons for the surging popularity of open source software.

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