Tag Archives: Network World

Facebook's Open Compute network is limited, Cisco says

Facebook’s Open Compute project, which is working on open source servers and switches, will be limited by “weaknesses” in scope that Cisco can exploit, CEO John Chambers said this week.

In an exclusive interview with Network World when he also touched on the consumer market and EMC alliance, Chambers said efforts like Facebook’s to commoditize and wring cost out of hardware purchases will open up opportunities for Cisco to provide solutions that are better tailored to specific customer needs.

“I think this will just be one more series of good challenges that Cisco will say ‘what’s the business objective on,'” Chambers said of Open Compute. “There are a lot of weaknesses to the area — we’re going to go back and solve customer problems. If you’re standalone anything, this is going to be a hard market to play in. Anything white label, where the decision is cost or opex, you’re going to lose.”

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What Cisco will not do is sit around and let Open Compute proponents and supporters guide the discussion on commodity switches and servers. Cisco’s messaging will be proactive instead of reactive this time.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Can Fortinet Hold Its Momentum?

By Richard Saintvilus, The Motley Fool

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Within the past couple of months, Facebook, Microsoft and Apple, each have reported some type of user account or network breach. This has placed quite a bit of attention on enterprise security companies such as Fortinet to raise its defenses. And I don’t think it’s coincidence that the stock has risen as much as 35% during that span.

While Fortinet has also benefited from an excellent fourth-quarter earnings report, these shares have now reached expensive territory — at least when compared with Check Point . Not to say that the stock can’t go higher, but the added premium has to come from somewhere. Can Fortinet deliver? And given the increased popularity in smaller players such as Palo Alto Networks and Sourcefire, it’s also worth asking whether Fortinet’s momentum can negotiate with current value.

Is being better enough?
The security services industry has become congested. Everyone’s looking to get in position for the growing demand of threat prevention. The good news, though, is that there are plenty of knucklehead hackers out there who will keep the industry booming for quite some time, which is a good thing for investors, in a manner of speaking.

However, though, while the pie might get bigger, it only means that the competition will want bigger pieces. Investors will demand it. But it won’t be easy. Market share will be based on what CIOs think is the best solution for their network. To that end, Fortinet is getting high praise over rivals such as Check Point and Dell‘s SonicWall.

A recent intrusion prevention system, or IPS, test-performed by Network World, which used a security test tool called Mu Dynamics, concluded that Fortinet had the highest catch rate among its peers. Those performing the test said: “In most products, we saw less than two percentage points of difference between the two sets, meaning that there’s very little tuning of the IPS possible. Fortinet’s FortiGate was the exception, showing a 10% to 25% difference in attacks blocked, offering the network manager more tools to match the IPS to their network.”

That’s great news for Fortinet, which just also landed a significant contract with Eurosport, the No. 1 pan-European TV sport network, which said it will deploy FortiGate to protect employees across 17 countries in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. While this announcement is new, there was also an extensive study by Eurosport’s IT department before Fortinet won the contract, which revealed that FortiGate’s performance levels were three times higher than Check Point. That’s all well and good. But what does all of this really mean for investors?

OK, then, how about in execution?
When you get these sorts of raving reviews, one should expect the reverence to manifest itself in the quarterly reports. Here, too, Fortinet is kicking tail. Recently, the company beat both top- and bottom-line estimates as revenue surged 25% year over year. This is while Check Point posted just 3% revenue growth.

Profitability was also strong, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Juniper to unveil new advanced switch, promises networking improvements

Juniper Networks is readying a new programmable core switch to address software-defined networking in campuses and data centers.

Sources say it is called the EX9200 and is based on the MX router. It comes in three configurations: 4-slot, 8-slot and 14-slot chassis, the same form factors as the company’s successful MX 240, 480 and 960 routers for enterprises and service providers.

An overview of it can be found here. Juniper confirmed it will be unveiling a “new, advanced switch” and offered an embargoed briefing, but Network World declined.

[ ENTERPRISE FIRE SALE?: Juniper Networks tried to sell enterprise assets: report ]

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld