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Packeteer is introducing a new management platform that draws data from its own and other vendors’ gear to boost the performance of applications over the WAN and is the first step in a broader application-performance plan.
Called IntelligenceCenter, the software monitors performance, reports on it and supplies tools to optimize it.
The software goes beyond managing Packeteer PacketShaper, iShaper and iShared appliances; it gathers data from multiple devices to paint a more complete picture of application performance. It can gather data from any Netflow devices and via devices that support SQL and SML.
The information is presented on a single console that also is used for configuring and managing Packeteer gear.
IntelligenceCenter also gathers network performance data that can be used to verify that MPLS services are configured properly and that each application receives the level of service designated for it. Businesses can use the platform to create custom reports on application behavior.
This fits into a larger plan to create what the company calls a service-assurance environment to address how to continue improving application performance after acceleration technology reaches its limits.
The focus will be on the productivity of users, which will require reporting and management tools that discover user experience of application performance as well as the ability to automatically tweak parameters such as quality of service to improve that experience.
Eventually, these parameters could include turning on more virtual server capacity by boosting processing power and memory available to a particular application so it can better handle shifting demands from users, the company says.
According to Packeteer, that will enable businesses to set policies that define the response time users receive. For instance, the policy might say that users of a particular application will get three second or better response time 99% of the time.
This policy would automatically turn the knobs on the underlying parameters that can deliver the policy, such as bandwidth allocation, quality of service, queuing priority, memory and processor capacity, the company says.
As part of this effort, Packeteer plans to introduce next year a software client for individual computers that can optimize protocols -- functions previously available to Packeteer customers only via the company’s appliances.
Comments (3)
Are you on Riverbed's payroll?By Anonymous on December 8, 2007, 11:17 amEverywhere I go, I see Justin plugging Riverbed, even if the article doesn't mention them. It's like clockword. If the article mentions WAN optimization, or Cisco...
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Juniper already does most of thisBy Anonymous on December 6, 2007, 12:37 pmJuniper already does most of this on a single hardware platform. So do some of Packeteer's other competitors. Here is another Packeteer box to add to their already...
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RE: Packeteer introduces plan for guaranteeing WAN application performanceBy charl6f on December 6, 2007, 2:29 amI think this sounds like an interesting approach to ultimately providing better performance to the end user. Yet with the cost of bandwidth decreasing and products...
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