Welcome to Virtual WAN Speeds and Feeds

Where does WAN optimization and application acceleration come together with virtualization and cloud computing? Right here.

Aug 24, 2010

Jim Metzler’s SearchEnterpriseWAN evaluation of Certeon aCelera
“…aCelera performance can be tailored to the topology, environment and performance requirements of both data centers and branches; is 64-bit; and takes advantage of the benefits of virtualization, ranging from system monitoring to high availability and distributed resource scheduling.”

“Important synergies exist among virtual servers, virtual desktops and virtual appliances such as a WOC or a performance monitoring solution. Perhaps the most important synergy is that virtual appliances are of particular interest to IT organizations when server virtualization technology has already been disseminated to branch offices and has also been implemented in the data center”.

Get Jim’s full virtualization report from Webtorials

Check out the Jim’s article Virtual appliances WOC software needed in both datacenter and branch. on SearchNetworking

Jul 19, 2010

WAN optimization technology has been around for quite some time now.  In 1994, it was first introduced for telephony and later made its way into data networking to prioritize different types of traffic.

Over time, WAN optimization technology has grown in sophistication giving us protocol optimization, an ability to handle a wide array of traffic (e.g., CIFS, HTTP, FTP, MAPI, SSL, etc.) and variety acceleration techniques.  Given how long WAN optimization has been around, one would think that the WAN optimization market is shrinking and that every company has this technology by now.

However, according to a May, 2010 Gartner report entitled “WAN Optimization Controller Vendor Revenue, Worldwide, 2006-2014, the WAN optimization controller market will continue to grow to US $9.83 Billion from 2009-2014 at a compounded annual growth rate of 14.6 percent.  So, what continues to drive the WAN optimization market?

Several significant IT trends are the drivers for the WAN optimization market:

-Server virtualization

-Cloud computing (public, private, hybrid approaches)

-Data center consolidation

-A continual need for the network to handle complex applications and rich media

In addition to these market drivers, there is one absolute:  Whenever applications are being accessed over the wide area network, they will always be subject to delays, packet loss and jitter …which will inevitably lead to application performance  delays.

As we see it, the WAN optimization will continue to go strong for many years to come.

Jun 30, 2010

When it comes to disaster recovery planning, storage capacity is an important consideration. Enterprises must determine if they need to augment their tradition storage technology or migrate to cloud-based storage.

Apr 21, 2010

As cloud computing rages on in popularity, hype, and maybe even implementations we are left to wonder if we could use  a technology version of the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale to define cloud computing realities versus those just blowing smoke?

Apr 13, 2010

We read with great interest this article on NetworkWorld.com by Jim Metzler which looks at the WAN virtual appliance market over the next 12 – 18 months. We are always very interested in analyst projections, industry influencers’ opinions, bloggers writings, venture capital investments, public market reactions for the WAN virtual appliance market. In particular, this Network World article takes a look at what we consider the basis for our blog – do businesses want to base their branch office IT operations on a server or on a virtual appliance?

Mar 08, 2010

Why does being virtual really matter in application delivery within the cloud and across the WAN? Well, as this article on PCQuest.com points out, it’s faster and more cost effective. Or, as the author so succinctly puts it, “Another fairly common, though expensive, solution is to place pairs of special dedicated (hardware) appliances along the transport path to boost or improve throughput.”

Mar 02, 2010

We read with great interest this blog entry from DoubleCloud entitled, “Why Should ISVs Care About Virtual Appliances, A Personal Testimonial.” The author points out two main ways in which ISVs can leverage virtual appliances:

  1. ISV’s can package their existing product as a virtual appliance. Packaging as a virtual appliance can simplify the delivery and deployment process (think cloud). And some applications may even run better in a virtualized environment.
  2. Use application infrastructure virtual appliances to reduce development time, efforts, costs.

Feb 25, 2010

Our good friends over at Redmondmag.com have an interesting in-depth article on “Building a Private Cloud.” This article is written by what we would call a “super-techie”; Eric Beehler has more certifications and random letter combinations after his name than your average technical guru – this guy knows of what he speaks.

Feb 22, 2010

This solution brief, jointly published by Dell and Certeon, discusses the approaches and benefits of a multi-vendor approach when seeking to accelerate business continuity through virtualization.

Jan 15, 2010

Bojan Simic has written an interesting piece on how only a few of these vendors are actually offering management products that are based on virtualization technology or using SaaS as a delivery method.  Bojan legitimately asks the question: If organizations can achieve significant business benefits from virtualization and the Cloud when managing their computing resources, can they achieve similar benefits from using these technologies for managing the performance of IT and business services?

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