Cloud computing disrupts the vendor landscape
If you think cloud computing is a disruptive force within the enterprise, just imagine what the cloud is doing to the vendor landscape.
If you think cloud computing is a disruptive force within the enterprise, just imagine what the cloud is doing to the vendor landscape.
With scores of new cloud companies popping up and so many existing players jumping on the cloud bandwagon, we wondered where the traditional enterprise networking vendors stood?
With scores of new cloud companies popping up and so many existing players jumping on the cloud bandwagon, we wondered where the traditional enterprise networking vendors stood?
With scores of new cloud companies popping up and so many existing players jumping on the cloud bandwagon, we wondered where the traditional enterprise networking vendors stood?
More and more enterprise IT shops - as they get comfortable with <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/102510-burning-questions-virtualization-storage.html">virtualization</a> practices in their own private clouds - are considering a jump to the public cloud. But before making that leap, consider these pieces of advice from those that have already jumped.
Cloud security threats come in all shapes and sizes, so we asked eight experts to weigh in on what they see as the top threat to cloud security. The answers run the gamut, but in all cases, our cloud security panelists believe that these threats can be addressed.
Security is one of the major impediments to enterprises moving their resources into the cloud. So, it's not surprising that numerous cloud security companies are springing up, attempting to address specific cloud security issues, like protecting virtual machines or encrypting data in motion.
More and more enterprise IT shops - as they get comfortable with virtualization practices in their own private clouds - are considering a jump to the public cloud. But before making that leap, consider these pieces of advice from those that have already jumped.
Information about how to securely navigate in the public clouds is, well, cloudy. We asked enterprise IT folks and IT consultants what resources they turned to get educated on this particular topic. The responses can loosely be broken down into three categories: niche conferences; big conferences, and authoritative voices accessible on the Internet.
Someday, cloud security vendors and cloud services providers will convince enterprise IT that it's safe to move sensitive data and mission critical apps from the private cloud to the public cloud.
Hindsight is indeed 20/20. Even though we didn't build the products that have changed the way networks do business in the last 20 years, our birds'-eye view of those developments gives us a license to pinpoint which 20 products have had the most impact on the network industry.
We know what iSCSI is - a protocol that defines how devices move block-level storage data over IP links. But what can iSCSI do for you?
Our comparative review of Microsoft Corp.'s Windows 2000, Novell Inc. NetWare, Red Hat Inc. Linux and Santa Cruz Operation Inc.'s (SCO) UnixWare struck a nerve with our print and online readers.
Novell on Wednesday issued a patch for a little-known synchronisation glitch in the version of Novell Directory Service (NDS) that ships with NetWare 5.0.
Right on schedule, Novell has rolled out its first support pack for NetWare 5.
While it mostly comprises more than 100 patches for minor bugs discovered since NetWare 5 shipped in September, the free package does include one new tool that will help users easily migrate their existing IPX-based NetWare 3.x and 4.x servers to this pure IP-based network operating system.