Author Archives: Greg Ferro
Author Archives: Greg Ferro
Today's Heavy Networking discusses the notion of looking at, and learning about, networking via a systems approach. Our guest is Dr. Bruce Davie who's had a long career in networking, has written numerous IETF RFCs, and is the author of a new set of free books on networking and computer systems.
The post Heavy Networking 604: Taking A Systems Approach To Networking With Bruce Davie appeared first on Packet Pushers.
We discuss what we know so far about supply chain disruption, what impacts to your projects. We also consider resellers/distributors survival and what plans can companies make.
The post HS011 Can We Survive IT Supply Chain Disruption appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today on the Network Break, we discuss Marvell's choice of the Dent network OS for its Prestera silicon, Microsoft shares details about how its Azure cloud service thwarted a 2.4Tbps DDoS attack, a researcher shares details on snooping data from a copper patch lead, and other tech tidbits.
The post Network Break 355: Azure Brags About DDoS Protection; Marvell Hitches Ride With Dent Network OS appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today on the Tech Bytes podcast we’re talking Zero Trust Network Access, or ZTNA, with sponsor Fortinet. As organizations grapple with controlling end user access to applications and services, particularly when those end users and applications could be anywhere, Fortinet is here to make the case that it’s the right platform for ZTNA. Our guest […]
The post Tech Bytes: Why Fortinet Zero Trust Works For You appeared first on Packet Pushers.
This week on Network Break, VMware disgorges a slew of announcements at VMworld 2021, Facebook shoots itself in the foot with BGP and DNS bullets, Marvell announces new silicon for Data Processing Units (DPUs), and more tech news analysis.
The post Network Break 354: VMworld’s Constipation, Facebook Footgun, Marvell 5nm DPUs appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today's Heavy Networking podcast discusses the pros and cons of building a private 5G network in the enterprise. We examine use cases, contrast 5G with Wi-Fi, unpack the hardware and software required, and more. Intel is our sponsor for this episode.
The post Heavy Networking 597: Why Enterprises Want Private 5G (Sponsored) appeared first on Packet Pushers.
When it comes to allocating budget for cybersecurity there are many approaches to breaking it down into line items. We discuss various ideas and possibilities that might offer some insight for your own situation.
The post HS010 Budgeting for Cybersecurity appeared first on Packet Pushers.
In today's sponsored Heavy Networking show, we talk to Opmantek about NMIS, an intelligent network management platform that spans monitoring, visibility, automation, and configuration management. Our guest is Opmantek CTO Keith Sinclair.
The post Heavy Networking 595: Detect, Diagnose, And Act With Opmantek’s Automated Network Management Software (Sponsored) appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Its not widely that DDOS attacks also cause damage from state exhaustion in devices. A recent study why Netscout surprised me that many engineers are aware of overload bandwidth or routing devices but give less considerations to state exhaustion in application aware devices.
The post Tech Bytes: DDOS and State Exhaustion With NETSCOUT – Updated appeared first on Packet Pushers.