Extreme targets data centre automation with software, switches
Extreme has unveiled new automation software and switches to help customers turn-up and manage new data centre networking segments.
Extreme has unveiled new automation software and switches to help customers turn-up and manage new data centre networking segments.
ExtremeAI security app features machine learning technology that can understand typical behaviour of IoT devices.
Toi Ohomai Institute of Technology has turned to Extreme Networks to improve Wi-Fi access for staff and students and to boost network performance across its eight campuses locations and more than 70 sites
At Interop this week, Alcatel-Lucent updated its wired/wireless unified access portfolio with a new access switch, and SDN and application analytics extensions.
Extreme Networks has unveiled a software architecture for building SDNs and enabling interoperability between its technology and that of recent acquisition Enterasys.
Now that Extreme Networks has closed its acquisition of Enterasys, it's time to focus on the task at hand as a company twice its previous size.
Bay of Plenty Polytechnic students in New Zealand no longer complain about network speeds or downtime since the introduction of new switches.
Extreme Networks and Brocade this week separately announced products and strategies to tightly integrate IT resources in the enterprise campus.
Extreme Networks is laying off 13% of its workforce, or about 90 employees, in an effort to reduce expenses by $7 million per quarter.
Extreme Networks this week unveiled 100G and 40G Ethernet modules as well as SDN application support for its BlackDiamond X8 core switch.
After years of stagnant or lackluster growth, Extreme Networks tapped Oscar Rodriguez to bring new life to the switch maker in 2010. He scrutinized global operations, streamlined the product line and brought a new focus that he says will really come through this spring with a new wave of switches. Rodriguez shared his goals for Extreme in 2012 with Network World Editor-in-Chief John Dix and Managing Editor Jim Duffy.
WLAN vendor Meru Networks has announced a new optional software module that lets its Wi-Fi networks recognize privately owned clients and automatically configure them to meet corporate security and management policies.
Extreme Networks has introduced a specially designed Wi-Fi access point about the size of an <a href="https://www.networkworld.com/slideshows/2010/120101-iphone-quiz.html">iPhone</a>, replacing an Ethernet wallplate in less than two minutes, and acting as a controller to 24 other units. The goal is simplifying 802.11n deployments, cutting their costs, and creating a Wi-Fi network tailored to the unique demands of wireless smartphones and tablets, says the company.
Looking to cut $20 million in expenses, Extreme Networks this week said it will cut 110 employees, or 16 percent of its worldwide workforce.
Extreme Networks' <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2011/030111-extreme-networks-mobile.html">new product roadmap</a> has a catchy name -- Make Your Network Mobile -- but it might be a little misleading since the plan has little to do with iPhones, tablets or moving around between cellular and Wi-Fi networks.