Moving past its infancy, software-defined networking (SDN) is becoming a significant player in the management of IT infrastructure and network design. While implementation can be a challenge, SDN is ...
Anurag Saxena is a lead/principal software quality engineer at Red Hat and specializes in open-source software solutions. With over 15 years of experience in networking technologies, he manages the ...
Software-Defined Networking (SDN) is transforming the network and giving network operators unprecedented network programmability, automation, and control. Network administrators are exploring it as it ...
Market is witnessing strong demand as enterprises adopt network automation, cloud-driven infrastructure, and centralized network control to enhance agility. However, high deployment costs and security ...
Software-Defined Networking (SDN) represents a paradigm shift in network management by decoupling the control plane from the data plane, thereby centralising network intelligence and enabling enhanced ...
Today, as the IT environment continues to evolve, Software-Defined Networking appears to be the network architecture of the future, according to industry experts like Mills. While conventional ...
The increasing need for compute resources can strain traditional infrastructure, as well as the IT teams responsible for delivering on time and under budget. Previously, scaling a business required ...
In this guest article, Gilad Shainer and Eitan Zahavi from Mellanox explore Infiniband networks and the benefits and potential of software-defined networking. Software-Defined Networking (SDN) is a ...
The dawn of software defined networking (SDN) ushered in an era of disaggregation of the networking control plane from the data plane; management of the network was no longer bound to the networking ...
Adara Networks has been selling SDN equipment to service providers for years. Adara's chief software architect explains how SDN's advantages extend across the data center This week, InfoWorld’s New ...
ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. — The Army’s Next Generation Command and Control program, otherwise known as NGC2, is forging a novel approach to how Soldiers access, share and utilize information.
An approach to designing and operating large-scale networks that is based on programming the forwarding decisions in routers and switches via software from a central server. Software-defined ...