The latest government-is-spying-on-you scandal is much more smoke than fire – at least at present.
Quantenna’s announcement today of a Wave 2 .11ac chipset is an indication that (a) Wave 2 is going to happen a lot sooner than many users (and analysts) assume, and (b) 802.11ac is, well, ditto.
Aruba announces their first 802.11ac access points – but, in this case, it’s not just about the radio.
If you’re thinking that BTLE is just an evolution of Bluetooth, well, you could be right. But it’s really a very different animal altogether and one that could have a brilliant future ahead of it.
Here’s a crazy thought: will Apple eventually retire the Mac as we know it, perhaps with a more Mac-like OS in place of the “CE” iOS, and a stronger cloud offering á la Google? I think such is a real possibility.
This is the second time I’ve written a column like this. And I want this to be last.
Unified networking and software-defined networking are beginning to play major roles in the evolution of network architectures and implementations. We explore these in-depth in a new White Paper, available now.
Two more Webinars on two very important topics.
Well, not exactly, but recent announcements from Aerohive, Cisco, and HP point the way to unified wired and wireless networking extending beyond management alone - creating new products that far surpass the original vision of the “wireless swit
A final thought on Yahoo’s show-up-or-quit policy, and then it’s back to technology, I promise.