Company Snags Network Management Expert and Industry Veteran
SANTA CLARA, CA — April 16, 2013 — Packet Design, the leading provider of IP network route analytics software, announced today that it has hired Matt Sherrod as Vice President of Product Management. Sherrod will lead product strategy, product design and integrated partner solutions to expand the Packet Design product portfolio and deliver a best-in-class customer experience.
Sherrod has more than 25 years of networking experience. He joins Packet Design from CA Technologies where, as the Vice President of Product Management, he defined product direction and strategy for the company’s infrastructure management solutions. Over the last 10 years he has held a number of field and management positions at CA Technologies and NetQoS. Prior to joining NetQoS, Matt worked as Director of Communications for a Fortune 100 global enterprise, applying leading edge technologies to improve application delivery.
“Matt Sherrod has a deep understanding of customer needs coupled with years of experience in defining and delivering innovative network performance management products to address them,” said Scott Sherwood, CEO of Packet Design. “He is uniquely qualified to lead Packet Design’s product strategy and ensure we provide world-class management solutions for complex service provider and Continue reading
This post represents the solution and explanation for quiz-10. It describes the functionality of the Down Bit in preventing routing loops in your network.
In my continuing series on the decidedly boring, I would like to discuss the subtle, yet paralyzing, evil of stale documentation. In my experience, stale documentation can be useful or it can be disastrous, depending on how much is wrong. Personally, when I see more than a couple of tiny mistakes in a diagram, spreadsheet, […]
The post Fighting Stale Documentation appeared first on Packet Pushers Podcast and was written by Keith Tokash.
Because of my personal interest in the CCIE Security program (at least the written exam the next time I’m up for CCIE recert), I asked Nat Timms if there was an updated CCIE reading list. This list was recommended to me by Nat in her role as CCIE Security program manager; a big thanks to […]
The post CCIE Security v4 Reading List – Update From The Program Manager appeared first on Packet Pushers Podcast and was written by Ethan Banks.
Once I had got my iTunes library downgraded to 10.7 and liberated some of my DRM'd media I thought it would be awesome to use my Raspberry Pi as an Airplay Receiver...
Head over to http://www.raspbmc.com/download/ and follow the instructions to download and install Raspbmc. Once you've prepped your SD card, popped it in your Pi hole and got it booted it should start the installation… at this point you can grab a coffee
In older versions of Raspbmc you had to SSH in and enable the web server
in /home/pi/.xbmc/userdata/guisettings.xml
In the latest version this was already enabled, so I just picked up my phone, downloaded the official XBMC remote app from the Android marketplace (or iTunes store if you are that way inclined).
A couple of points of note when adding your host in the XBMC remote app.
If you don't know your IP address and your Pi is not automatically found
you can find this from your local router. The HTTP port is 80 by default
in Raspbmc (not 8080) and the password is blank, although I configured
username xbmc and password xbmc and this works just fine!
Once set up it Continue reading
Once I had got my iTunes library downgraded to 10.7 and liberated some of my DRM'd media I thought it would be awesome to use my Raspberry Pi as an Airplay Receiver...
I decided to downgrade my iTunes from 11 to 10.7 for a number of reasons, top most was the fact the the new UI drives me barmy!
I followed the great instructions at http://arstechnica.com/apple/2013/03/how-to-downgrade-from-itunes-11-to-version-10-7-on-your-mac/ and found that I couldn't open my iTunes library after the upgrade.
Since I didn't make a library backup before the iTunes 11 upgrade I
thought I would be stuck, but to my surprise I found a Previous iTunes Libraries folder in my ~/Music/iTunes
Restoring was as easy as taking my swapping iTunes Library.itl with
the file in the Previous iTunes Libraries folder from December and
everything worked fine...
One thing I noticed was that my new iTunes purchases didn't show, but this was a minor inconvenience. Now I have the old iTunes back and I'm happy… for now...
I decided to downgrade my iTunes from 11 to 10.7 for a number of reasons, top most was the fact the the new UI drives me barmy!
Once I had got my iTunes library downgraded to 10.7 and liberated some of my DRM'd media I thought it would be awesome to use my Raspberry Pi as an Airplay Receiver...
I decided to downgrade my iTunes from 11 to 10.7 for a number of reasons, top most was the fact the the new UI drives me barmy!