Friday, January 12, 2007

Enabling the Web 2.0

Being that my father and brother are very educated on their computer and technology, I have been vicariously involved. They inform me on all of the new technological advances, so that I can thereby forward it on to YOU GUYS! (Awesome deal, right?) Anyway, there is this new deal out called DPI or Deep Packet Inspection. I am sure some of you out there are just about clueless as to what this is, right? Well, the role of DPI in Bandwidth Management is that Allot deep paced inspection (DPI) technology identifies and classifies data packets at the application level (that's Layer 7) and at wire speed, giving both broadband servce providers an unparalleled view of all the traffic traversing their networks. Allot Communications is a leading provider of intelligent IP service optimization solutions based on deep packet inspection (DPI) technology. The ability of Allot's DPI technology is that its awareness can enable deep analysis f static and dynamic protocols, application signatures, content patterns, and session bhavior such as connections per second, without overstepping privacy boundaries. With this AWESOME deep packet inspection from Allot, broadband service providers gain visiblity into:

Subscriber usage patterns (per IP address or per user)
Application usage patterns
Most popular services (P2P, VoIP, online games, email, video…)
Most popular applications (e.g., P2P: BitTorrent, KaZaa, eDonkey, Gnutella, MP2P, FastTrack…)
Competing services and how much they use the network
Malicious traffic on the network

This is an awesome step forSubscriber Management Platform and I suggest all of you guys to seriously check it out, as it's the coolest thing out there right now. Plus, the site is very easy to navigate and I"m sure you guys won't be disappointed!


This post is sponsored by Enabling the Web 2.0.

1 comment:

Bob said...

This is awesome. For an amateur who just picks up info from her father and brother, you really seem to be into this. Its fascinating stuff. I've also heard a lot about application control. Do you have any info on this? Thanks. Bob

 
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