Search Results on big switch

Reading Time: 3 minutes As most people know, Intel adopt a Tick Tock model for processors development: a tick advances manufacturing technology, a tock delivers new microarchitecture. Usually this mean that a tick means processors with more frequency speed (sometimes also more cores and/or more cache) and a tock means usually new features (but not necessary more frequency speed and/or more cache/cores). But when a new generation (tick or tock) as been introduced, after some months, this usually means cheaper processors (or at similar price) compared to previous generation. Now a possible confusion could be generated by the Westmere […]

Reading Time: 3 minutes KEMP’s LoadMaster family of affordable, yet feature rich application delivery controllers and server load balancer appliances automatically and intelligently manage user traffic and applications, to deliver website integrity for small-to-medium sized businesses (SMB) and managed service providers. KEMP LoadMaster is an hardened Linux appliance that provide several features: Server Load Balancing for TCP/UDP based protocols NAT-based forwarding or Direct Server Return (DSR) configurations Layers 4-7 Load Balancing Layer 7 Content Switching Server Persistence Windows Terminal Services load balancing and persistence with Session Directory integration SSL Termination/Offload/Acceleration Application Front-end (Caching, Compression and IPS security) Advanced, App-Transparent […]

Reading Time: 3 minutes With a vSphere 5 upgrade there is an important vDesign decision: if you already have some VMFS3 datastores could be better upgrade them to the new version of build new datastores directly with VMFS5? The upgrade procedure is quite fast and friendly and could be applied to a live datastore, so seems that there isn’t a big different between an upgrade or a clean format. But usually the recommendation is to re-format each LUN to VMFS-5 rather than upgrade it. This will fix a number of issues, including:

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