Monday, June 16, 2014

Cisco VNI: Annual internet traffic to grow 20% by 2018

What Is Going Wrong With BYOD? | The 12 biggest gaffes by high-tech execs

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Cisco VNI: Annual internet traffic to grow 20% by 2018
The Cisco Visual Networking Index (VNI) has been around almost as long as this newsletter/blog, and this year’s predictions suggest that annual internet traffic will grow more than 20% over the next four years. Not surprisingly, video in general and HD/4K video in particular are responsible, with mobile-to-mobile devices driving much of the growth. I expected IP video to make up 79% of all IP traffic by 2018, up from 66% in 2013.The survey is also predicting a shift in traffic composition, suggesting that between now and 2018 most traffic will originate from devices other than personal computers. In addition, Cisco predicts that “Wi-Fi traffic will exceed wired traffic for the first time and high-definition (HD) video will generate more traffic than standard definition (SD) video,” according to the company’s news release. According to the survey, Wi-Fi connections will generate 61% of IP traffic by 2018, while cellular data services will contribute 15% of traffic. 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: Network Instruments

The Hidden Costs of APM
APM solutions can deliver relevant network visibility and help to prevent problems before they negatively impact the business. But which solution is best for your organization? With this white paper, you will learn key questions to ask your vendor to ensure that you are getting the best value for your investment. Learn More

What Is Going Wrong With BYOD?
For the past couple of years, tech pundits have been pounding the Bring Your Own Device drumbeat to such a fast and lively rhythm that you'd think just about everyone was dancing to it.Some industry watchers have even predicted the coming of a BYOD mandate, whereby employers would require employees to provide their own smartphones and perhaps tablets as a condition of employment.But is reality matching the hype? Not really.MORE ON NETWORK WORLD: 12 most powerful Internet of Things companies CompTIA's spring survey of 400 IT and business executives shed light on what it calls the sorry state of BYOD: Depending on the size of the company, anywhere from 39 percent to 51 percent of respondents are not doing BYOD at all. Nada. Zip.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More

The 12 biggest gaffes by high-tech execs
The 'oops!' heard 'round the worldLate last week, Apple CEO Tim Cook tweeted a photo of himself touring a Texas factory that produces Mac Pros. Nothing special, right? Until you looked behind him and spied a pair of iMacs running Windows. Oops.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More

Does the data center need an OS?
One of latest companies to get a cash infusion from famed Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz is Mesosphere, a startup that is essentially attempting to build an operating system for data centers ( about that news here). But it begs the question: Do data centers need an OS? The idea behind Mesos, which is the open source software the startup is commercializing, is that it can sit above all of the hardware and applications in a data center to dynamically provision and manage workloads and infrastructure. The alternative is having silos in a data center for various applications that are manually deployed. Instead, Mesos is intelligent software that finds the best place for workloads to run, monitors how resources are used and looks to consolidate workloads to run a more efficient data center.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More


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

Need to move to IPv6 highlighted as Microsoft runs out of US address space
The work to enable IPv6 on Azure is well underway, but there is no due date Read More

Cisco: Broadband providers should not treat all bits the same
The FCC's net neutrality rules need to make room for some traffic management, the company says Read More

INSIDER
3 ways to manage corporate digitization
Single digital executive or digital islands? It's time to choose an approach that fits your corporate strategy, according to research by the MIT Center for Information Systems Research. 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

Security training is lacking: Here are tips on how to do it better
A recent survey found that more than half of enterprise employees weren't getting any security awareness training at all, and the lack was reflected in their risky behavior. Fortunately, there is abundant guidance available for companies that want to strengthen the weakest link in the security chain. Read More

10 reasons why open source is eating the world
Open source software, once just the domain of technology hobbyists, is taking over the software world. According to Gartner, open source software will be included in mission-critical software portfolios of virtually all Global 2000 enterprises by 2016. In fact, according to open source management vendor Black Duck Software, there are now a million different open source software projects. Here are 10 reasons for the surging popularity of open source software.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More

FCC looking into Internet peering complaints from Netflix, consumers
The agency is asking for information about middle-mile traffic exchange between Netflix and large broadband providers Read More


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