Have you heard of Vector Packet Processing? You know, VPP?
If you haven't, you will soon, because this particular technology allows networks to move information much faster than they've been able to up until now.
I know, I know-the network is always getting faster. Making it faster is our job. But sometimes it gets faster in small increments, and sometimes it gets faster in big 'ol leaps.
VPP is one of the things that feels like it will deliver a leap.
And luckily, this week we were able to get two of the Cisco engineers behind this revolutionary technology on the show to explain it. Dave Barach is a Cisco Fellow-which is a pretty darn exclusive club, considering there are only about a dozen of them-and Ed Warnicke is a former physicist that's now a Distinguished Consulting Engineer. During our discussion, they explain:
What VPP is and how it works
Why VPP is so interesting to service providers
Which products and use cases VPP is likely to start turning up in (and is already in)
What FD.io is all about
The things that make open source communities succeed or fail
See the video podcast on our YouTube page, or listen to the audio version on SoundCloud. And if you like what you hear, we invite you to subscribe to our channel so you don't miss any of the other exciting podcasts we have scheduled over the next several months.
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Cisco Systems Inc. published this content on 26 July 2017 and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 26 July 2017 16:40:40 UTC.
Original documenthttps://blogs.cisco.com/cloud/its-all-about-vpp-and-fd-io-on-episode-14-of-cloud-unfiltered
Public permalinkhttp://www.publicnow.com/view/C6C99A4DFAF3686415D918C8D6AC3961B7A8543F
Cisco Systems, Inc. is the world leader in designing, developing, and marketing Internet network equipment. Net sales break down by family of products and services as follows:
- network equipment (68.9%); switches and routers, technological software and systems (storage, Internet access, and security systems, wiring, gateways, connection interfaces and modules, etc.), etc.;
- services (24.3%): technical assistance, network design, execution, and integration services, etc.;
- security products (6.8%).
Net sales are distributed geographically as follows: Americas (58.7%), Europe/Middle East/Africa (26.6%) and Asia/Pacific (14.7%).