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Where the Cloud Touches Down: Simplifying Data Center Infrastructure Management

Thursday, July 25, 2013
10:00 AM PT/1:00 PM ET

In most data centers, DCIM rests on a shaky foundation of manual record keeping and scattered documentation. OpManager replaces data center documentation with a single repository for data, QRCodes for asset tracking, accurate 3D mapping of asset locations, and a configuration management database (CMDB). In this webcast, sponsored by ManageEngine, you will see how a real-world datacenter mapping stored in racktables gets imported into OpManager, which then provides a 3D visualization of where assets actually are. You'll also see how the QR Code generator helps you make the link between real assets and the monitoring world, and how the layered CMDB provides a single point of view for all your configuration data.

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A Network Computing Webinar:
SDN First Steps

Thursday, August 8, 2013
11:00 AM PT / 2:00 PM ET

This webinar will help attendees understand the overall concept of SDN and its benefits, describe the different conceptual approaches to SDN, and examine the various technologies, both proprietary and open source, that are emerging. It will also help users decide whether SDN makes sense in their environment, and outline the first steps IT can take for testing SDN technologies.

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Verizon, Partners Push OpenFlow, SDN

The telecommunications giant Verizon has joined with other top technology partners to collaborate on a software-defined networking (SDN) demonstration that is based on the OpenFlow protocol. The news of the collaboration was made at an Open Networking Summit being held this week in Silicon Valley.

Verizon will work together with Intel, HP and a company called Adara Networks to create a project to show how SDN can work for a network, particularly one the size and scale of Verizon’s. In addition to offering local business, residential and mobile phone service, Verizon is also a cloud service provider. Verizon’s top concerns in exploring SDN are to improve "service velocity and service flexibility," says Prodip Sen, director of network architecture at Verizon Network and Technology.

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"We need the ability to be able to introduce services faster and to be able to modify these services as the need arises," Sen says. "Our core networks are built on the traditional networking paradigm, and it’s not so easy to change how traffic gets routed. With all of these new applications coming online, the traffic patterns are no longer what we used to think they are."

Adara Networks brings the SDN network intelligence to the project. While it has been around for about 10 years, managing the computer networks of U.S. Department of Defense and other government agencies, the company just recently expanded into commercial markets.

SDN works by uncoupling from the physical hardware-based network elements the software that directs the traffic, similar to the way server and storage virtualization works. In SDN, software-based intelligence augments network intelligence in routers and switches. Eric Johnson, chairman and CEO of Adara, calls the solution a "network overlay. An overlay means while we have the ability to work using physical interfaces, we can literally create tunnels--an overlay, like a VPN--only this VPN is very special. A VPN would be a secure transmission overlay, while this is an SDN overlay so that the infrastructure does not have to be modified."

Johnson says the beauty of Adara-delivered SDN is that a customer would not have to rip and replace its networking gear. The new software overlay would provide the SDN capabilities to deliver network services now in demand as networks carry more traffic.


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