Last week, Cisco turned away from one of its most important-at-the-time market-expanding initiatives when it sold Linksys off to Belkin. It was the latest in a long string of retreats from the consumer space, the market sector that’s clearly the largest. Some think that the retreat was a bad idea, but I’m not sure that’s…
Microsoft and Juniper: Cases of Cloudaphobia?
Microsoft and Juniper both reported their numbers yesterday, and when I looked at their stocks pre-market it happened that both were up exactly the same percentage. Interesting because both companies’ future literally depends on the cloud, and neither company is fully exploiting that reality. Microsoft’s Windows numbers were up for the quarter and off for…
Apple: Not About the iPhone
The trouble with earnings seasons (and there are four of them annually so it seems we’re always in one) is that there are a lot of data points you could talk about, many of which are significant. They’re also often disconnected, making it hard to blog about them without writing a book every day. So…
Signposts on IBM’s and Google’s Paths
Tech got some semi-good news in two earnings reports yesterday, from Google and IBM. I insert the “semi-“ because the quarter measures the past, which is only an indirect indicator of the future. The most significant insight from the reports is that the politically driven economic slump we had in the holiday period last year…
This Week’s Data Points Point to Metro
The future is written in the data points of the present, so let’s start today by looking at some of those data points, then reading some tea leaves. NSN is said to be looking to issue nearly a billion dollars in bonds in a move that may well be a precursor to the joint venture…
Is There a Revolution in our Revolutions?
The notion of “revolution” is always exciting, sometimes useful, occasionally destructive. The notion of two or three of them at once tips the scales into the latter category in my view. We have been looking at “the cloud revolution” for several years, we’ve just started “the SDN revolution” and now we’re facing “the NFV revolution”. …
Contradiction: The Street’s View of Networking in a Nutshell
It’s sometimes nice to end a week with some analysis of the Street’s view of networking. To hear that there are sometimes contradictions is likely not going to surprise you, and I think contradictions often expose some interesting truths. They also give me a chance to lay out a financial view of industry health. JP…
CIMI Corporation’s NFV White Paper Comments
We filed comments with the operators who generated the white paper on Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) and I’ve referenced those comments in posts this week. I’m not sure how to find them in the NFV site or whether everyone has access to that site, so I’m posting the material below. This material can be freely…
It’s Cisco’s Turn at SDN Bat
It’s probably not going to surprise anyone to hear that Cisco is going to be providing more detail on its SDN and NFV framework at its own partner conference in later January, given that Juniper took its shot this week. The two companies have always tried to pee in each other’s yards, stepping on announcements…
Is the QFabric Chip the Root of Juniper’s “Service Chaining?”
I had noted in my blog on Juniper’s SDN announcement yesterday that we had covered the Juniper QFabric launch in early 2011 and had written an article on QFabric, the PTX, and its potential value in the cloud. The article included comments on the potential for “service chains” similar to that offered in Juniper’s SDN…