Tag Archive for 2009

Brocade Selling Itself

Brocade Selling ItselfChannelInsider citing the Wall Street Journal is reporting that network equipment maker Brocade Communications Systems Inc. put itself up for sale on 10-05-09. The paper, citing people familiar with the matter, said Oracle and Hewlett-Packard were potential bidders for the company, but a deal was not imminent and Brocade may not even go ahead with a sale. Oracle CEO Larry Ellison told investors at Oracle’s annual shareholder conference Wednesday. “We have no interest in buying Brocade,” in response to a question from an investor according to Fortune.

Data centerTo compete with much bigger rival Cisco Systems Inc, the company has been bolstering sales partnerships with large technology vendors such as IBM and Dell to expand their customer reach. In an interview with Reuters last month, Brocade Chief Executive Michael Klayko had said he did not see a need for Brocade to merge with or acquire another company, citing the company’s expertise and partnerships.

However, Goldman Sachs analyst Min Park told Fortune, interest in Brocade is picking up, “Brocade is a likely strategic fit for a number of potential acquirers.” He includes Hewlett Packard, Juniper, Dell, IBM, and Oracle among those interested in Brocade.

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It is unlikely that Dell will purchase Brocade since Dell has Perot Systems to digest and a sales partnership with Brocade. Juniper is not in the financial position but is the most need of the product. IBM is financially capable but the hardware business seems to be losing focus at Big Blue. That leaves HP  for three reasons, first, it is financially capable, second, it is looking to grow its ProCurve business and its EDS acquisition is well underway. The wild card could be Huawei if they can get government approval. Of course, Brocade CEO Mike Klayko just may have needed some extra pocket money as the Wall Street Journal article triggering a 14 percent jump in the company’s shares. Mr. Klayko’s $5 million in options increased by $700,000 in one day.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Size Doesn’t Matter for Botnets

Size Doesn't Matter for BotnetsDarkReading points out a new report released on 09-29-09 from researchers at Symantec’s MessageLabs unit which provides a detailed analysis of the size and output of current botnets. One of the report’s conclusions: Size doesn’t always matter.  Rustock, for example, is still the largest of the botnets, with an estimated size of between 1.3 million and 1.9 million nodes. Cutwail is next in size, with an estimated 1 million to 1.5 million bots.

Size Doesn't Matter for BotnetsBut neither of these two botnets is the largest proliferator of spam, according to Paul Wood, senior analyst at MessageLabs and one of the authors of the report. That title goes to a rapidly emerging botnet called Grum, which delivered an average of 39.9 billion spam messages per day last quarter — more than 23 percent of all the spam on the Internet.

Despite the fact that it’s half the size of Rustock, Grum is generating much more spam,” Wood says. “It’s getting each bot to do a lot more work.

Bobax, a botnet that has been around for more than two years, is also becoming more efficient, generating more than 27 billion messages per day and 15.2 percent of all Internet spam, the report says. That means each Bobax node generates more than 1,400 spam messages per minute.

Botnet operators have discovered that many ISPs don’t immediately recognize the huge output of individual bots because each bot’s performance is affected only on the upload, not on the download, Wood says. “Your computer might be a bot, but it might not affect your download performance very much,” he observes. “It’s only when users try to upload something and experience a performance problem that the ISP gets a complaint.

As they become more sophisticated, botnet operators are finding ways to make their infrastructures more efficient, Wood says. A new botnet, Maazben, accounted for only 0.5 percent of Internet spam 30 days ago, but now is generating 4.5 percent — about 2.4 billion messages a day — at its peak. As with Bobax, each Maazben bot is highly productive, pushing out nearly 1,300 spam messages per minute.

No matter what their size or how efficiently they operate, botnets clearly are at the heart of the spam problem, MessageLabs says. According to the report, botnets generated an average of more than 150 billion messages per day last quarter — nearly 88 percent of all the spam on the Internet.

The takedown of ISPs like McColo definitely helped, but it doesn’t solve the problem,” Wood says. “Already we see botnet operators spreading traffic across multiple ISPs, effectively giving themselves better backup than some enterprises have.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

A Rocking Windows Evening

A Rocking Windows EveningMSFT has decided that if you can find 9 friends that don’t mind being pitched, you could be chosen to host a Windows 7 House Party and win a free signed copy of Windows7. There are four pre-defined categories for the Windows 7 party: PhotoPalooza, Media Mania, Setting up with Ease, and Family-Friendly Fun. To help spark the partying, MS has posted a unique 6-minute-long video guide to help you get that party rocking…

If the video doesn’t give you enough ideas, the good folks at Download Squad have developed The Windows 7 Party Buzzword Drinking Game [to be played responsibly, of course].

  • Mentioning ‘jumplists’ – Take a drink.
  • ‘Better than Vista’ – Everyone takes a drink.
  • Mentioning any product whose name contains the word ‘Live’: Everyone takes a drink.
  • Saying any product name containing more than 2 words: finish your drink.
  • Mentioning any product name containing more than 4 words: finish your drink, and neck another.
  • ‘My Mac does that already’ – Everyone finishes their drink, and you neck another.
  • Windows crashes: the party’s over. But if there’s any surplus alcohol left, we’d hate to see it go to waste….

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Smart Grid needs IPv6

Smart Grid needs IPv6Cisco Systems is looking at IPv6 as a critical component in securing the next-generation electricity distribution system. IPv6 is attractive to the Smart Grid initiative for two reasons, the first being an abundance of IP addresses available in the expanded 128-bit address space for all the gizmos they hope to sell in a market that Cisco pegs at $20 billion a year. “IPv6 is an interesting discussion and one that occupies a lot of bandwidth at Cisco,” Marie Hattar, Cisco’s vice president of network systems and security solutions marketing, told InternetNews.com. “Some people say that for smaller deployments, we could get away with IPv4, but the smart grid has a number of parts.

The second benefit to the Smart Grid is the security features in IPv6 which will add a layer of protection to the vulnerable electric grid management systems. Security is also now top of mind as the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is now investigating a report into potential threats to the West Coast power grid. Earlier this year, widely circulated reports noted that foreign entities—presumably from China—infiltrated the U.S. power grid on several occasions and have the ability to disrupt power distribution.

China infiltrated the U.S. power grid

At the 2009 Black Hat security conference, a security researcher detailed security vulnerabilities in smart grid meters. “If you think about hacking into a smart meter, it’s like hacking into your TV’s remote control — you still get your TV,” Ms. Hattar said. “The meters are a reporting mechanism but it’s not going to affect the electrical system.” Still, Cisco’s Hattar added that smart meter vendors are concerned about security and Cisco will work with them. “A key part is to build out an end-to-end framework that is secure. A lot has to do with isolation and not exposing the grid to points of entry that are hackable.

As utilities are looking to build out smart grid, it’s more effective to agree on a common protocol across the board as opposed to trying intermix different ones,”  Hatter says. “In many ways, this is like the early days of the Internet where we ultimately settled on IP. We see IP as the scalable protocol for smart grid and we’re working with a variety of vendors to advocate this and make this the key protocol of choice.

Cisco is among the numerous IT vendors with initiatives for improving the power grid. IBM is working with several of its partners on power grid issues through its Smart Planet program.

There’s likely to be subsidiary benefits to the smart grid, like furthering the cause of IPv6  since tens of millions of users and new devices around the world will require connectivity. For example, with utilities adopting IP-enabled metering for thousands of homes connected to the network, there could be an issue with addressing over IPv4. On IPv6, thanks to its plentiful address availability, there are no addressing issues.

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Not only is this a technological issue, but it is an energy policy issue. An electrical grid that can support Smart meters, will allow energy producers to better control the flow of electricity, which will increase the efficiency of the electrical grid, which will, in turn, decrease our dependence on fossil fuels. America needs to get off of electrical generation by fossil fuels and this technology can speed the process before it is too late and gasoline reaches $7.00 a gallon making the current recession seem like a walk in the park.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Big Blue Props Up Broadband over Powerline

Big Blue Props Up Broadband over PowerlineBig Blue continues to support Broadband over Powerline (BPL) as a way to close the broadband divide in rural areas. According to an IBM Global Financing press release the division has established a financing agreement with DS2, a supplier of integrated chip technology for powerline vendor International Broadband Electric Communications’ Broadband over Powerline Regenerating Unit (BRU) smart boxes. The BRU’s are attached to an electric utility pole to provide high-speed Internet signals to residential customers via the electrical drop. IBEC is working with rural electric utility cooperatives to extend broadband access to ‘unserved’ customers mainly in the South, East, and Midwest.

This is not Big Blue’s first major BPL investment. Even as many industry pundits were reading BPL its last rites, IBEC signed a $9.6 million agreement with IBM to deploy BPL networks in Eastern U.S. electric cooperatives. The investment was heralded by the Utilities Telecom Commission (UTC) as a “major step forward in bringing broadband services to the residents of rural America.” At that time, IBM and IBEC said they were working with the Midwest Energy Cooperative to deliver broadband over powerline to area residents and businesses throughout the seven counties the utility serves.

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Sounds to me like they are propping up their SmartGrid ecosystem in the upcoming battle with Cisco over the estimated $20 Billion a year electrical grid modernization market.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.