Cisco partner upgrades performance management
By
Stephen Lawson
,
IDG News Service
, 10/28/2003
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Visual Networks, a maker of WAN performance management software, Monday announced it has enhanced its product, separated it from a hardware
platform and broken it up into pieces that the customer can mix and match.
In a bid to give enterprises and service providers more flexibility, Visual separated its software from its Analysis Service
Element/Digital Service Unit (ASE/DSU) hardware and divided it into modules for different capabilities, an offering it calls
Visual UpTime Select. Cisco, which integrates Visual's software in its Internetwork Operating System for several of router models, also will now offer
it in module form.
Visual's new way of offering its products will help M&T Bank fix network problems in its 712 locations spread across several
U.S. states, according to Jim Finn, vice president of telecommunications at M&T, a regional bank based in Buffalo, New York.
The bank has full-fledged Visual ASE/DSUs at 50 of its main locations, but buying one for each branch wouldn't be economical
because the performance management software is rarely needed at any given small branch, Finn said. The bank plans to buy bare-bones
DSUs from Visual along with "token" licenses, which are basically prepaid licenses to use the performance management software
for a given time, he said.
The Visual ASE/DSU, which essentially serves as a high-speed modem for a wide-area Frame Relay or ATM connection, is distinguished
from conventional DSUs because it can collect a variety of data about the performance of the wide-area connection and the
applications running over it. With Visual's add-on software, IS managers can use that information to do real-time troubleshooting,
track recurring problems, find the sources of problems and determine whether critical applications are getting the kinds of
service they should be, according to Robert Norberg, director of product management at Visual Networks, in Rockville, Md.
Now customers can buy the DSU by itself, at prices starting at $1,195, and buy only the management software modules they need.
In addition, a new architecture makes it easier to integrate the management software with system management applications such
as HP. OpenView and Aprisma Management Technologies' Spectrum, Norberg said.
By the middle of next year, Visual plans to offer new modules, such as automated network analysis software that examines several
different variables at once and a tool for determining the quality of the voice-over-IP (VoIP) call experience. The system
also will be able to collect and use information from third-party DSUs. Those DSUs don't have the same data-collection capabilities
as Visual Networks' devices but can gather some information that the Visual management software can use, Norberg said.
Information about network performance is becoming more important to enterprises, IDC analyst Stephen Elliot said. Not only
do companies want to get maximum productivity out of applications such as ERP and supply chain management, but they increasingly
are adopting VoIP systems that are sensitive to network performance.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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