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HP Virtual Application Network Addresses BYOD Challenges

HP says product will deliver quicker, more reliable app rollouts with fewer errors.

Interop 2012 Product Preview
Interop 2012 Product Preview
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HP is promoting its new Virtual Application Networks solution, unveiled in April, which speeds the development of cloud-delivered software applications on an enterprise network during this week's Interop 2012 networking industry conference. The world's largest IT vendor also says it is deepening its existing partnership with F5 Networks to automate the process of deploying applications in minutes on both wired and wireless networks for employees who use their own personal wireless devices at work. Finally, HP is introducing a new 10500 series campus network core switch, which the company says reduces latency by 75% in delivering rich media applications.

The HP announcements at Interop are representative of the current state of the networking industry. Networking vendors have seen a pickup in adoption of 10-Gigabit Ethernet (GbE) switches as a needed upgrade from 1GbE connectivity, while the emergence of 40GbE is being seen in the network core. Coinciding with that is the growing adoption of software-defined networking (SDN), which is how HP says it can deliver quicker, more reliable, and more manageable application rollouts.


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The HP Virtual Application Network solution addresses several pain points for companies trying to develop new applications quickly and deploy them on wireless networks in the new bring-your-own- device (BYOD) environment that IT needs to support, says Michael Nielsen, director of solutions for HP Networking.

It can take as long as three months to develop and deploy a new application, and by that time, Nielsen points out, the business opportunity the app was intended to address may have passed the company. Also, IT is having a hard time managing a BYOD environment: HP cited a survey that 60% of enterprises are unsure about which mobile devices are running on their corporate network. Also, manually configuring apps and network devices using the command line interface (CLI) method is prone to errors; 70% of network downtime is caused by CLI configuration errors.

You're not going to deploy 250,000 CLIs in three days with no errors, right? If you continue to manage by CLI, you're doomed, Nielsen says.

The Virtual Application Network addresses those pain points with app deployment in as little as three minutes to whatever devices are on the network, and with a simplified management interface called the Intelligent Management Center, including F5 application control, to deliver the app over wired or wireless networks. Another feature is what HP calls a Dynamic Virtual Private Networks (DVPN), which includes "zero-touch" configuration of routers across the enterprise to reduce CLI errors while securing the wireless connection like all VPNs do.

Read the rest of this article on Network Computing.

See the future of business technology at Interop Las Vegas, May 6-10. It's the best place to learn how cloud computing, mobile, video, virtualization, and other key technologies work together to drive business. Register today with priority code CPQCNL07 to get a free Expo Pass or to save 25% on Flex and Conference passes..

Robert Mullins has covered the technology industry in Silicon Valley for more than a decade for various publications. He has written about enterprise computing including stories about servers, storage, data center management, network security, virtualization, and cloud computing.


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