Friday, August 17, 2007

Aruba puts the squeeze on Cisco

Network World

Cisco News Alert




Network World's Cisco News Alert, 08/17/07

Welcome to the new Friday edition of Network World's Cisco News Alert in which we focus on the top items from Cisco Subnet, your gateway to Cisco news, blogs, discussion forums, security alerts, giveaways and more. Enjoy!

* TOP PICK OF THE WEEK:

Aruba puts the squeeze on Cisco
Aruba put itself in a better position to give Cisco a run for its money in the wirelss LAN space when it went public in March and already it has grabbed some cisco accounts. InformationWeek reports that real-estate company Prudential Fox & Roach recently chose Aruba over Cisco for its WLAN, and that Aruba is also replacing Cisco WLAN gear at the U.S. Air Force and at Microsoft. Is Aruba on your radar? Let us know.

Network World Storage Buyers Guide

Find the right products for your enterprise - fast. From a tape library to an on-line backup service to a complete, drop-it-in-place SAN Solution, check out this Buyers guide. With over 200 products divided into specific categories, you can conduct side-by-side comparisons and make the best decision for your enterprise.

Click here to go to the Storage Buyers Guide now.

ALSO:

Cisco VPN Client for Windows bug could allow for unauthorized privilege escalation

Cisco offers up safe mapping tool as open source

Cisco China's 'management kindergarten' aims to grow seasoned execs

How Cisco's unified communications system for small businesses tested in the real world

 

* FROM OUR BLOGGERS:

Brad Reese on Cisco: Were Cisco partner networking career fairs total disasters?
It appears that at least some of this summers' Cisco partner network career fairs were total disasters. At one fair, candidate attendance was so bad (thus boredom for Cisco and its hiring partners), that Cisco itself rolled out the bar halfway thru the fair with 2 hours left until the fair was scheduled to close (yes of course, the drinking continued way beyond closing time too).

Jeff Doyle on IP Routing: BGP Filtering at the Edge
When you work with IGPs, you tend to think of routing holistically. That’s because IGPs are designed to run under a single administrative authority and so assume that all peers in the routing domain can be trusted. BGP, on the other hand, is designed to be run between routers in different administrative domains and therefore between untrusted peers. As a result BGP requires that you think differently about routing.

Author Expert Jamey Heary: Cisco 8Gbps IPS solution for the Datacenter
Deploying an IPS solution in a datacenter can be a tricky affair. If not deployed properly, an IPS solution can severely affect the resiliency, performance, and security of a datacenter. Cisco’s IPS solution has been extensively tested to make sure it meets the stringent requirements of today’s complex datacenter (DC) environments.

ChannelSurfing with Ken Presti: Managed Services and the Cisco Channel
Well you can’t swing your arm nowadays without hitting news coverage about somebody’s managed services strategy. And Cisco is definitely among the companies making moves in this area. But if you’re a channel partner looking at a possible MSP model, there are a host of questions to consider ...

Michael Morris' Notes from the Field: Nothing like building a network
There's nothing like actually building a network. Sure, architecting grand ideas is nice. Working with customers and business units to design solutions demonstrates the value we, as network engineers, can bring to an organization. And any good network engineer likes drawing a pretty picture with their favorite Cisco icons in Visio. But there's nothing like taking all that design work and Visio files and making it work.

 

HOT DISCUSSIONS AMONG CISCO SUBNET READERS:

Who has heard of Cisco network careers fairs?
Brad Reese on Cisco is blogging about the dearth of candidates visiting Cisco's careers fairs but a couple of readers say it's no wonder that attendance was poor. These readers had never heard of such fairs.

Cisco small business product 'horror story'
McQueen writes: "Our firm has bought the small branch solution from Cisco and I can tell you we hated and are fighting to return it to the reseller."

Cisco's Web site outage
Cisco last week suffered a well-publicized three-hour Web site outage that was caused by a data center maintenance issue. Enter reader comments about how embarrassing this must be for the Cisco's Data Center 3.0 marketing folks and why Cisco didn't take the medicine that it's so good at selling.

 

FREEBIES, GIVEAWAYS AND OTHER NOTABLES:

* Enter to Win one of 15 copies of Jamey Heary's book "Cisco NAC Appliance: Enforcing Host Security with Clean Access." Details here. Get a sneak peek of a chapter here.

* Read a free chapter of "Comparing, Designing and Deploying VPNs" by Mark Lewis. Chapter 10: Designing and Building SSL Remote Access VPNs

* Check out Cisco Subnet's library for more free chapters from Cisco Press books.

TODAY'S MOST-READ STORIES:

1. Verizon turns another hose on fire flap
2. New URI browser flaws worse than first thought
3. Microsoft's super bundle of security patches
4. E-cards: I delete them all unopened. You?
5. Sun, IBM ink OS agreement
6. 10 claims that scare security pros
7. Citrix acquires XenSource in a $500M deal
8. Moore’s Law meltdown fueling efficiency
9. WAN acceleration offers huge payoff
10. Cisco: SONA promises advanced next-gen networks

MOST DOWNLOADED PODCAST:
NW Panorama: Why IT is reading your e-mail


Contact the author:

Senior Editor Jim Duffy covers Cisco for Network World.

Linda Leung edits Cisco Subnet.

Cisco Subnet: The independent voice of Cisco customers

 



BONUS FEATURE

IT PRODUCT RESEARCH AT YOUR FINGERTIPS

Get detailed information on thousands of products, conduct side-by-side comparisons and read product test and review results with Network World’s IT Buyer’s Guides. Find the best solution faster than ever with over 100 distinct categories across the security, storage, management, wireless, infrastructure and convergence markets. Click here for details.


PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE
You've got the technology snapshot of your choice delivered to your inbox each day. Extend your knowledge with a print subscription to the Network World newsweekly, Apply here today.

International subscribers, click here.


SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES

To subscribe or unsubscribe to any Network World newsletter, change your e-mail address or contact us, click here.

This message was sent to: networking.world@gmail.com. Please use this address when modifying your subscription.


Advertising information: Write to Associate Publisher Online Susan Cardoza

Network World, Inc., 118 Turnpike Road, Southborough, MA 01772

Copyright Network World, Inc., 2007

No comments:

Post a Comment