Software-Defined Networking (SDN) is continuing its move from hype to reality. One big step in that direction is the OpenDaylight Project. The community-led and industry-supported open-source SDN is ...
Big Switch Networks is the leading Open Software-Defined Networking (SDN) company. Big Switch shipped the first Open Software-Defined Networking product suite, and has built the industry’s most open ...
Switch Light extends Big Switch Networks Open SDN Suite, which includes both open source and commercial solutions for the community and enterprise customers. Switch Light is based on the open source ...
SAN JOSE, Calif., Nov. 10, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Infinera (NASDAQ: INFN) has been awarded a Telecom Infra Project (TIP) Requirements Compliant Bronze Badge for its GX G42 Compact Modular Optical ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Big Switch Networks, one of the new higher-profile ...
Chat with ONRC/ON.Lab on creating an SDN Open Source Powerhouse for network virtualization, software-defined networking, and OpenFlow ...
First version of open source SDN/NFV software debuts amid debate about OpenDaylight's aims, Cisco's participation in the project The OpenDaylight Project, the software-defined networking industry ...
The OpenDaylight SDN project released its first code and drew a sellout crowd to a conference this week, but it will take more than that before the effort can be declared a success. Backers of the ...
The problem we face in the SDN market is tricky -- the open source that may help SDN get started; maybe the same open source with potential to kill the market opportunity as the more a Vendor ...
A few weeks ago, I wrote a blog post defining what “open networking” really meant and how it should be defined. On Monday morning, one of the companies I mentioned in the blog, Pica8, announced its ...
To paraphrase Abraham Lincoln (which you admittedly don’t often get to do in a technology blog), “God must have loved standards because he made so many of them.” That sentiment is nowhere more evident ...