HP Offers New Networking Hardware To Target Cisco Competition

HP is introducing several new networking switches, wireless access points and other products on Monday in a direct challenge to market leader Cisco Systems. In launching the new products, HP shared benchmarking results that showed significant improvements in capacity, performance, energy efficiency and latency over comparable Cisco switches and access points. The new products are being unveiled at Interop IT Conference and Expo 2011 in Las Vegas.

May 10, 2011

3 Min Read
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HP is introducing several new networking switches, wireless access points and other products on Monday in a direct challenge to market leader Cisco Systems. In launching the new products, HP shared benchmarking results that showed significant improvements in capacity, performance, energy efficiency and latency over comparable Cisco switches and access points. The new products are being unveiled at Interop IT Conference and Expo 2011 in Las Vegas.

HP is introducing the A 10500 line of campus core switches, which will be available in the second half of 2011. The company is also unveiling the E5400 and E8200 switches, as well as the E-MSM400 line of wireless access points, all available now. Citing benchmarking tests by Tolly Enterprises, the A 10500 switches, for instance, deliver lower latency and higher performance than "our nearest competition," says Mike Banic, VP of marketing for HP Networking.

"I don't mind being overt about it. We did this comparison versus a Cisco Catalyst 6500. Compared to the 6500 customers can purchase today, it delivers 250 percent higher switching capacity and 270 percent higher 10 Gigabit Ethernet wire-speed ports," says Banic.

Likewise, HP claims that the E5400/E8200 switches provide 90 percent lower latency, 600 percent higher performance and 35 percent lower energy consumption compared with the competition, while the access points offer 50 percent higher performance, can manage up to 15 high-definition video streams each, and, with one console, can manage as many as 2,500 devices.

While those numbers look impressive, they need to be viewed cautiously, says Zeus Karravella, an analyst with the Yankee Group. "They're comparing themselves to Cisco products that are a few years old now, so there's no doubt that [the HP products are] higher performing," says Karravella. He adds that the new HP switches are just for campus networks, not data center networks.The new products are being delivered as components of what HP calls its FlexNetwork Architecture, part of its larger Converged Infrastructure strategy to develop IT assets--such as servers, storage, network and security--in a holistic fashion. But while these new products may have significant performance improvements, HP's architecture offering is still relatively nascent, says Karravella.

"They may have a product advantage over Cisco, but that doesn't necessarily mean they have an architectural advantage. If a customer decides they want a converged voice-video-data infrastructure, Cisco has that and HP doesn't," he says.

HP says the new higher-performance network equipment is necessary because current networks are close to the breaking point: They are required to handle more traffic at faster speeds and deliver more of it wirelessly, as high-bandwidth traffic such as video is increasingly in demand.

HP is also introducing the HP Tipping Point S6100N intrusion prevention system (IPS) for security, which delivers 60 percent better performance than its predecessor, says Doug Finley, security marketing manager for HP Networking. TippingPoint, a company HP acquired along with network equipment maker 3Com in 2010, includes an organization called DVLabs, a network of security professionals who discover and report software vulnerabilities ahead of others.

"The big differentiator of our solution is that customers that use our product are secured 180 days in advance of when a typical ISV or application provider would announce a vulnerability," says Finley. The IPS device, available now, carries an estimated list price of just under $210,000. Pricing for the switches and access points was not provided.HP is also introducing the Intelligent Management Center v5, a campus network management console that helps IT professionals monitor and manage the network through one pane of glass. HP's Banic notes that Cisco has as many as 28 different network management platforms, creating what he called a "swivel-chair management" dilemma for IT staff who must view multiple screens.

"We had one customer tell us this actually manages Cisco gear better than Cisco has," Banic says. "And I've repeated that everywhere I can."

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