Network Utilization Archives

NetQoS Combining Tech With Network Instruments for Retro-Analysis


by Nathan Bragaw

We just entered into a strategic partnership with Network Instruments. Their GigaStor appliance captures and stores all the packets traveling networks for historical packet-level analysis. Our SuperAgent identifies the source of performance problems, application, server, or network, and isolates when and where they are degraded. Together, the products can monitor large networks, isolate performance issues, and provide packet-level analysis specific to the problem.

For example, this allows an engineer to identify a network that is showing slow web performance. The engineer can then drill down to a packet capture that includes network traffic 30 minutes before and 30 minutes after the event. This capability is changing the troubleshooting capabilities by replaying network traffic prior to the issue occurring. It's like having a TiVO for your network.

Engineers get an alert from SuperAgent, identifying the time and location of a network problem. Then you go into GigaStor and sort through the traffic to identify the root cause of the problem. We’re pretty psyched about GigaStor’s ability to reassemble packet streams to recreate e-mails, web pages, IM sessions and VoIP calls.

We call it Retrospective Network Analysis, or RNA for short.

We should have the products completely integrated sometime in the next six months or so. We’ve already started selling Network Instruments’ GigaStor products through our sales team and our Web site.


Network Utilization Archives

A waste of $100B


According to Neal Weinberg at Network World magazine, Gartner analysts Mark Fabbi and Bob Hafner argued that IT and network engineering departments will “waste an estimated $100 billion over the next three years by overspending on network products and services.”

He [Fabbi] expanded on that premise this week to argue that network execs should only buy what they know they will need for the next two years, rather than buying more than necessary, just in case network requirements grow. More often than not, "just in case never comes," Fabbi said.

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