Comments
Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
Cloud Computing
Conference & Expo
November 2-4, 2009 NYC
Register Today and SAVE !..

2008 West
DIAMOND SPONSOR:
Data Direct
SOA, WOA and Cloud Computing: The New Frontier for Data Services
PLATINUM SPONSORS:
Red Hat
The Opening of Virtualization
GOLD SPONSORS:
Appsense
User Environment Management – The Third Layer of the Desktop
Cordys
Cloud Computing for Business Agility
EMC
CMIS: A Multi-Vendor Proposal for a Service-Based Content Management Interoperability Standard
Freedom OSS
Practical SOA” Max Yankelevich
Intel
Architecting an Enterprise Service Router (ESR) – A Cost-Effective Way to Scale SOA Across the Enterprise
Sensedia
Return on Assests: Bringing Visibility to your SOA Strategy
Symantec
Managing Hybrid Endpoint Environments
VMWare
Game-Changing Technology for Enterprise Clouds and Applications
Click For 2008 West
Event Webcasts

2008 West
PLATINUM SPONSORS:
Appcelerator
Get ‘Rich’ Quick: Rapid Prototyping for RIA with ZERO Server Code
Keynote Systems
Designing for and Managing Performance in the New Frontier of Rich Internet Applications
GOLD SPONSORS:
ICEsoft
How Can AJAX Improve Homeland Security?
Isomorphic
Beyond Widgets: What a RIA Platform Should Offer
Oracle
REAs: Rich Enterprise Applications
Click For 2008 Event Webcasts
In many cases, the end of the year gives you time to step back and take stock of the last 12 months. This is when many of us take a hard look at what worked and what did not, complete performance reviews, and formulate plans for the coming year. For me, it is all of those things plus a time when I u...
SYS-CON.TV
Juniper’s Out Gunning for Cisco
It is promising to roll out new line cards and routers that process two to four times more traffic than the competition

IT Strategy on Ulitzer

With IBM and Dell watching its back, Juniper strode into town Thursday like a gunslinger twirling its pearl-handled six-guns around ready to take on Cisco, the fastest gun in the West, and all the other network hombres.

The mid-sized company opened its barrage at the New York Stock Exchange, a new Juniper customer, on the 40th anniversary of ARPAnet.

It claims the Internet and its newfangled cloud progeny - which are doing things they weren't designed to do - are cracking under the load and are going to spin out of orbit any minute now. The model they're built on isn't going to work going forward, it said.

But fear not. It has the solution.

It's called the "New Network" and the vision, which called for Juniper to dream up with a new logo, is supposed to reinvent the network and the economics of networking and save the day complements of its new software, silicon, systems and partnerships.

Juniper is, for instance, promising to roll out new line cards and routers that process two to four times more traffic than the competition.

Its soon-to-be new flagship MX960 router, due out in December, is supposed to be able to download the entire contents of the Library of Congress in 12 seconds and access 8.5 million iTunes in a tenth of a second, 50 Blu-Ray DVDs in less than five seconds, 10 years of Hubble Telescope data in a minute and 430,000 HDTV channels simultaneously.

It will be built around a 65nm Junos Trio chipset, part of a new Junos One processor family, that's supposed to let networks scale dynamically and provide more bandwidth, subscribers and services all at the same time - no compromise, Juniper says.

It also claims breakthroughs in delivering rich business, residential and mobile services at massive scale at half the power per gigabit.

The chipset, code named Trinity, cost $80 million and five years to develop and there are 30 patents pending on the thing.

The purpose-built, industry-first "network instruction set," built into the silicon, is supposed to combine the performance benefits of ASICs with the flexibility of network processors and yield total router throughput of 2.6 terabits a second and nimbly manage 2.3 million subscribers on a rack.

The glory of widgetry, however, is a technology called 3D Scaling responsible for the breathtaking numbers.

Juniper calls 3D Scaling "one of those rare technology breakthroughs that can change business models" and it intends to use the secret sauce in its switches and security products too.

It claims the widgetry will offer a potential 540% increase in ROI over five years, improve power efficiency by 10 to one over other vendors, and cut aggregation services opex by a possible 47%, business services opex by up to 63%, and residential services by maybe 77%.

Of course what's a router without software, and the keystone of Juniper's platform is Junos, its updated open network operating system, Juniper's answer to Cisco's Internetwork Operating System (IOS).

The software now also includes Junos Space, available at prices starting at $15,000, and Junos Pulse, coming in the first half of next year.

Space is an open network application development and deployment platform, an SDK and an API meant to be used by third parties although it hasn't been yet.

Pulse is an integrated multi-service network client that's supposed to reduce the number of client applications that have to be distributed and supported and provide the location-aware and identity-aware access to networks that are currently available from Juniper in separate network clients.

Space is supposed to simplify network operations, automate support and accelerate service delivery. It ships initially pre-loaded with three Juniper-provided applications: Ethernet Activator, which is supposed to activate services, including VPN services, up to 10 times faster than the competition; Route Analyzer, from Packet Design, a company Juniper put money in a year ago, which is supposed to provide DVR-like recording and playback capability to plan, simulate and troubleshoot MPLS networks; and the very sensible time-saving Service Now, which is supposed resolve service issues by having Juniper systems "call" Juniper support experts with troubleshooting data and details.

And for the cloud people Juniper will have gateways in the first half that reportedly scale to support 10 million concurrent user sessions - 2.5 times more than Juniper's previous generation and five times more than Cisco.

The company also say the gateways can deliver up to six times faster firewall and seven times faster intrusion prevention services at a 50% power savings and 67% space savings over Cisco for comparable throughput.

It also got a bunch of tools for securing cloud services along with new support for VMware and Citrix.

Apparently Microsoft's going to be using Juniper's widgetry in Azure.

IBM, which cut a Cisco-snubbing OEM deal with Juniper in July because of Cisco's adventure into servers, is going to pick up Juniper's upcoming gateways in addition to its Ethernet switches and routers and sell them under the IBM label.

IBM and Juniper already have a collaborative single fabric project called Stratus that's supposed to simplify the cloud infrastructure by reducing components and collapsing tiers, share pools of resources and secure everything that they announced in February. No more news on that score.

Dell is going to sell Juniper Networks' widgets direct and indirect under its PowerConnect brand.

The stuff includes Juniper's MX routers, EX Ethernet switches and SRX gateways, all running Junos, the same stuff as IBM.

Forget that Dell already carries stuff like this from Brocade; that only underscores its message to Cisco.

Dell and Juniper are planning to work together on open, standards-based solutions for virtualized data centers and deliver technology solutions using Converged Enhanced Ethernet (CEE), a k a Data Center Bridging (DCB) and iSCSI to improve network economics. They mean to deliver a secure network infrastructure from a customer's traditional data center out to its branch offices, remote workers, customers and business partners and provide orchestrated management of users, workloads and data - in the name of avoiding single-vendor lock-in.

Dell also plans to market, service and support Juniper's high-performance networking solutions.

Meanwhile, Blade Network Technologies has licensed Junos, Juniper's first licensing deal, to develop blade server switches under an exclusive arrangement that sees it sell them to server makers worldwide.

Blade, a big player in the space, will put its value-added data center features on the switches, such as network-aware VMready virtualization, AMP Active Multi-Pathing technology, HotLinks for high availability as well as offer a vNIC (Virtual Network Interface Card), OFM (Open Fabric Manager) and Advanced OFM.

Juniper also claims to have the first 120 Gbps line card with the highest 10GE density for aggregation, video distribution, data center and edge routing; the industry's only edge routing with line-rate 100GbE performance for edge uplink, inter-data center and high-bandwidth aggregation; the industry's most powerful 3.5-inch routers (eight times faster than competitors) designed for delivering Carrier Ethernet services for multi-tenant buildings, as well as mobile aggregation, video and enterprise edge deployments; an Active Broadband Networks application in development for monitoring cable bandwidth and improving cable subscriber experiences; an Ankeena Networks application for video streaming and caching to enable low-cost, TV-like viewing; and a coy Project Falcon reference architecture for the mobile space.

About Maureen O'Gara
Maureen O'Gara the most read technology reporter for the past 20 years, is the Cloud Computing and Virtualization News Desk editor of SYS-CON Media. She is the publisher of famous "Billygrams" and the editor-in-chief of "Client/Server News" for more than a decade. One of the most respected technology reporters in the business, Maureen can be reached by email at maureen(at)sys-con.com or paperboy(at)g2news.com, and by phone at 516 759-7025. Twitter: @MaureenOGara

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Register | Sign-in

Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1

SOA World Latest Stories
Sooner than expected, Apple Thursday started previewing a developer-directed beta of Mountain Lion, its next-generation Mac OS X 10.8, due out late this summer. It’s borrowed some more features from iOS like the popular and unlimited iChat-replacing iMessages IM as well as Notes, Gam...
Cloud is a shift from the focus on underlying technology implementation to leveraging existing implementations and further building upon them. Cloud orchestration or a network of clouds is the wave of the future where these clouds can operate with elasticity, scalability, and efficienc...
In Aug 2011, around 72 million people accessed social networking sites from mobile, increase of 37% from previous year (study by ComScore) and nearly 50% (of 72 million) access networking sites almost every day. Devising a cohesive strategy for addressing both mobility and social medi...
Citrix has opened up a beta of its CloudStack 3, the first release of the open source cloud platform under the Citrix brand. Citrix acquired the Java-based cloud management last year when it bought Cloud.com. A full production version of the branded stuff is supposed to be available ...
EMC and VMware are going into the cloud business with Atos, the big, publicly owned, Paris-based global IT services firm, intending to take an equity position in Canopy, an end-to-end cloud company Atos is setting up using EMC and VMware technology. The companies said Wednesday when ...
A Munich court Thursday found Motorola Mobility guilty of infringing an Apple patent and handed Apple a permanent injunction against two Android smartphones. Apple can enforce the injunction after posting a bond lest MMI succeed in invalidating the slide-to-unlock patent (EP1964022) ...
Subscribe to the World's Most Powerful Newsletters
Subscribe to Our Rss Feeds & Get Your SYS-CON News Live!
Click to Add our RSS Feeds to the Service of Your Choice:
Google Reader or Homepage Add to My Yahoo! Subscribe with Bloglines Subscribe in NewsGator Online
myFeedster Add to My AOL Subscribe in Rojo Add 'Hugg' to Newsburst from CNET News.com Kinja Digest View Additional SYS-CON Feeds
Publish Your Article! Please send it to editorial(at)sys-con.com!

Advertise on this site! Contact advertising(at)sys-con.com! 201 802-3021


SYS-CON Featured Whitepapers
ADS BY GOOGLE