February 01, 2007
February 28, 2007
More on VMWare/Microsoft War of Words
By
Rich Karpinski
at 05:04 PM
In our news analysis section, we detail sparring by VMWare and Microsoft over the future of virtualization.
Software licensing is going to have to change in the age of virtualization. Who's got it right, Microsoft or its upstart rivals?
Our tech editors analyze the situation with some surprising results. Read on...
Continue reading "More on VMWare/Microsoft War of Words"
Posted here at 05:04 PM in Storage and Servers
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Major Vendors to Set Standards for IT Energy Efficiency
By
Andrew Conry-Murray
at 10:39 AM
The Green Grid is a new standards body promoting energy efficiency in the IT industry. Its goals are to reduce energy costs and help enterprises better manage energy usage by developing industry-wide metrics for measuring power usage and efficiency, create technology standards, and promote best practices for data center power management.
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Posted here at 10:39 AM in Network Infrastructure | Network and Systems Management
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February 27, 2007
He Said/He Said: Siemens UC Strategy
By
Rich Karpinski
at 09:18 AM
NWC's wireless experts Frank Bulk and Sean Ginevan had a chance to talk with Siemens executives about the new offering and the company's approach to unified communications. Read the news story here:
Then click through to read their he said/he said analysis on the NWC Blog.
Continue reading "He Said/He Said: Siemens UC Strategy"
Posted here at 09:18 AM in
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February 26, 2007
The NWC Interview: EMC's Mark Lewis
By
Tom LaSusa
at 01:26 PM
Mark Lewis, chief development officer at information-storage giant EMC, talks about his company's growth through acquisitions--a total of 23 companies in the past three years.
Listen Now | Read the Interview
Posted here at 01:26 PM in Podcasts
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February 23, 2007
He-Said/He-Said: WiMAX vs. Landline Broadband
By
Rich Karpinski
at 05:38 PM
Over in our News Analysis section today, we have a story on the IEEE working to boost WiMAX speeds. That led a couple of our editors, Frank Bulk and Sean Ginevan, to debate the prospect of a wireless technology overtaking wired options as a primary wide area data option.
Read their debate now:
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Posted here at 05:38 PM in Wireless
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February 22, 2007
Default passwords and how not to do it
By
Jordan Wiens
at 02:18 PM
A recent discussion about a Cisco speakerphone vulnerability reminded me this is far from the first time Cisco's had password problems. You'd think a company that has spent so much on security branding and indeed is recognized as the first company that "comes to mind as a Networking Security leader" in six of their eight target locales (7th in Japan, 5th in China, first in US/CAN, UK, Germany, France, Italy and India -- data courtesy Cisco Systems), they'd be a bit more careful about getting the basics right.
Continue reading "Default passwords and how not to do it"
Posted here at 02:18 PM in Security
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February 15, 2007
Breaking DNS with Wildcard records
By
Mike Fratto
at 10:43 AM
Charter Communication’s wildcard DNS resolution maybe useful to users surfing the web through a browser, but will break all other IP applications. Error handling needs to be performed locally by the application receiving the error. Handling errors in the network for application traffic causes more problems that they solve. Using wildcard domain names to handle unresolved hosts is bad engineering. Period.
Continue reading "Breaking DNS with Wildcard records "
Posted here at 10:43 AM in Application Infrastructure | Enterprise Applications | Network Infrastructure
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February 14, 2007
Alcatel-Lucent Goes SIP Crazy
By
Dave Greenfield
at 09:31 PM
Behind the discussions of innovation and enterprise-focus that permeated the keynotes and speeches here at the Alcatel-Lucent enterprise forum in Paris, the company demoted the SIP focus that will occupy much of is innovation this year.
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Posted here at 09:31 PM in Convergence
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New Meaning to Expensive WiFi
By
Dave Greenfield
at 08:46 AM
I'm here at the Alcatel-Lucent user forum on the day of love in the city of love getting a brain dump on Alcatel-Lucent's
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Posted here at 08:46 AM in Convergence | Wireless
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February 13, 2007
The NWC Interview: Mark Lewis, EMC
By
Tom LaSusa
at 10:52 AM
Mark Lewis, Chief Development Officer at information-storage giant EMC, talks about his company's efforts to grow through acquisition.
Posted here at 10:52 AM in Podcasts
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For Hackers, By a Hacker
By
Jordan Wiens
at 10:32 AM
It can sometimes be challenging to convince folks that Network Computing is serious about the motto, "For IT, By IT" (see banner, two inches to the right). It's not just a nice sounding phrase, but a major cornerstone of the philosophy of the magazine.
When I started covering the security beat, the most important challenge was learning the ins and outs of the magazine, working on my writing and other skills, not so much learning the technology. Security isn't just something I write about, it's what I do on a day-to-day basis.
Continue reading "For Hackers, By a Hacker"
Posted here at 10:32 AM in Security
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February 12, 2007
Extrusion Protection Heads for the Desktop
By
Andrew Conry-Murray
at 01:24 PM
Extrusion protection is heading for the desktop. Once defined by gateway appliances that monitored Web, e-mail and IM traffic for sensitive information that might be slipping out of the enterprise, a new crop of products put an agent directly on the desktop to plug potential leaks.
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Posted here at 01:24 PM in Network Infrastructure | Security
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February 09, 2007
Cisco Trust Agent not going open source
By
Mike Fratto
at 02:21 PM
According to Neil Wu Becker, PR Manger, Security, for Cisco, "Cisco is NOT open-sourcing CTA, nor do we have any plan to do so. We're not even considering it -- it's not something on our radar and it's not a pressing issue on our agenda."
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Posted here at 02:21 PM in Network Infrastructure | Security
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February 05, 2007
"Real World" Security
By
Jordan Wiens
at 10:35 PM
As I traveled out to San Francisco for RSA 2007 I was again struck by how, in many ways, the "real world" could use a security refresher. There are a number of examples where security researchers have exposed flaws in physical systems simply because they applied the same critical eye that they're used to using in their electronic analysis. Matt Blaze's research on master keyed locks, is one example, along with the Princeton group who found both physical and software security flaws in Diebold voting machinery.
To that end, I'd like to propose my list of obvious real world security flaws:
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Posted here at 10:35 PM in Security
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February 04, 2007
Fixing DHCP NAC Enforcement
By
Mike Fratto
at 05:16 PM
Extreme's ExtremeXOS 11.6, available on the X450 and BlackDiamond switches are getting an uplift that starts to make DHCP NAC enforcement comparable to 802.1X for enforcement. The feature enhancement tracks DHCP leases as they are handed out and applies ACL's on access ports. Extreme has a solid foundation that enhances NAC DHCP enforcement, but needs to work on a few niggling, but critical details with handing mobile computers, before it is truly enterprise ready. DHCP lease awareness is not new. Cisco has a feature in IOS 12 called DHCP Snooping and IP Source Guard that offers similar functionality. Switching software from other infrastructure vendors like Foundry Networks, and Nortel, also have DHCP snooping features.
Continue reading "Fixing DHCP NAC Enforcement"
Posted here at 05:16 PM in Network Infrastructure | Security
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February 02, 2007
The NWC Interview: Jon W. Dudas, U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
By
Tom LaSusa
at 04:08 PM
Listen to Jon W. Dudas Undersecretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office explain why more rejections are a sign of success.
Read the Article
Posted here at 04:08 PM in Business Strategy
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February 01, 2007
Make Your Own Blue Screen of Death!
By
Tom LaSusa
at 04:32 PM
A while back we asked our readers to come up with their ideas for a livelier substitute to Microsoft's infamous, but visually mundane Blue Screen of Death (BSoD). You can find all those lovely submissions here at the
Top 11 Wacky Replacements for Microsoft's Blue Screen of Death.
Continue reading "Make Your Own Blue Screen of Death!"
Posted here at 04:32 PM in Techno-Oddities
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Changing face of capacity planning
By
Mike Fratto
at 02:29 PM
If you’re still thinking of network capacity planning as speeds and feeds, then take a deep breath. Electrical power may well become the limiting factor in equipment purchases. Low wattage desktop devices like VoIP phones are on the market and are being deployed and powered using Power of Ethernet as defined by IEEE 802.3af. PoE is designed to run over regular CAT 3&5 cable and not interfere with other network devices. As more devices are powered over PoE, the load on the switch infrastructure will increase. Power meets networking.
Continue reading "Changing face of capacity planning"
Posted here at 02:29 PM in Network Infrastructure
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