Red Hat doesn’t want to compete with established SD-WAN and cloud security vendors. Instead, the company sees an opportunity to orchestrate SASE deployments.
The integration extends Fortinet's SD-WAN and firewall security to branch-to-cloud and cloud-to-cloud networking architectures using Azure's vWAN on-ramp.
The flaw allows an attacker to extract encryption keys from devices running Intel’s Apollo Lake- and Gemini Lake-based Pentium, Celeron, and Atom processors.
The chipmaker claims its Alveo FPGAs can go toe to toe with Nvidia's GPU-based accelerators while offering greater compute density, power efficiency, and integrated networking.
The companies aim to accelerate hybrid-cloud adoption, advance artificial intelligence, enhance cybersecurity resilience, and modernize enterprise IT operations.
The networking giant's Edge Services Platform provides lifecycle management, observability, and troubleshooting services for DPU-accelerated data centers.
The EPYC refresh comes as AMD scores another victory over rival Intel. Meta this week announced a new, more power-efficient server platform powered by team red’s EPYC 3 processors.
“SD-WAN doesn’t replace MPLS, but it has largely capped its growth. 5G is poised to change that,” VMware's Ramkumar Venketaramani and Ajitesh Gupta said.
While Fortinet expects to maintain strong revenue growth going into the fourth quarter, CFO Keith Jensen warned supply chain constraints could slow the vendor's momentum.
IBM CEO Arvind Krishna touted the spinoff as an opportunity to reorient IBM’s portfolio around two of the “most transformational” technologies: hybrid cloud and AI.
The update builds on several recent collaborations with colocation and cloud providers, and it boasts improved multi-tenancy and an updated management console.
Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger promised to put the needs of developers at the center of what Intel does. Something he admits “we haven’t done a great job of recently.”