Showing posts with label context. Show all posts
Showing posts with label context. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Kids and their Dot Coms

My daughter likes to glue pictures in a composition notebook – Disney Princesses, giraffes, fairies, Barbie scenes, herself and many other things a kindergartener gravitates towards.  Usually she asks for certain characters or a particular animal and I go find and print.  This weekend, however, as she was asking for some Barbie pictures and a basketball player, she specifically said, ‘you need to go to barbie.com and basketballplayer.com to get the pictures.’  Oh really?   She’s known about ‘dot com’ for a while, especially buyslushymagic.com but this was one of the first times she’s requested, rather instructed me to visit specific sites for her crafts.  She is good at a keyboard and knows how to search for youtube videos, which is becoming the norm for 5 year olds. 

I totally understand that each generation, due to whatever technological advancements, grow up in different era's with different ways of doing things and many conversations start with, ‘When I was growing up…’ or ‘When I was a kid…’   We didn’t have TV; we only had black & white TV; we had to get up to change the channel on our TV; we didn’t have cable TV; we had square TVs; we didn’t have HDTV; our TV wasn’t hooked up to the internet; we didn’t have streaming movies to the TV and soon it’ll be, ‘we didn’t have TVs that watched us when I was a kid.’  It’s fun to live during a time of so much technology innovation and growth and to work for a company, F5, that is an integral part of how it all works. 

And as is usually the case when I’m contemplating some nostalgia related topic, I came across this infographic:

Then vs Now: How Things Have Changed from 1982 to 2012

Isn’t it fun to look back and remember what we were doing last century?

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Technorati Tags: Pete Silva, F5, security, history, nostalgia, 1980, education, technology

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Thursday, June 16, 2011

Drive Identity Into Your Network with F5 Access Solutions

This webinar focuses on F5 Access solutions that provide high availability, acceleration and security benefits critical to your organization.  Running time: 55:51

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Technorati Tags: F5, interop, Pete Silva, security, business, education, technology, internet, big-ip, VIPRION, vCMP, ixia, performance, ssl tps, testing

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Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Audio White Paper - The F5 Dynamic Services Model

Today, agility in both business logic and an organization’s underlying IT infrastructure is imperative to success. Yet traditional IT infrastructures and processes simply are not agile. It is no surprise, then, that CIOs routinely express frustration with the time and effort required to align IT functions to changing business needs.

F5 believes a new approach to infrastructure design must emerge—one that enables enterprises to add, remove, grow, and shrink IT services on demand, regardless of location. This new infrastructure must dynamically optimize the interaction between users and resources in the face of rapidly changing conditions. It must allow the IT enterprise to adapt quickly to changing organizational demands for security, data protection, ease of access, market responsiveness, low cost, and high performance. This paper outlines F5’s vision for such an approach, explores its business benefits, defines F5’s architecture for delivery, and outlines a roadmap for implementation.  Running Time: 16:17  Read full white paper here.  And click here for more F5 Audio.


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Technorati Tags: F5, integration, data center, Pete Silva, security, business, education, technology, application delivery, data replication, cloud, optimize, dynamic, web, internet, security, hardware, audio, whitepaper, big-ip

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Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Who In The World Are You?

Steven Wright has said, 'It's a small world, but I wouldn't want to paint it.' The world is getting smaller with today's 24/7 global marketplace. Businesses have offices and employees around the world to serve the needs of the organization's global customers. Those users, whether they are in a branch office, home office or mobile need access to critical information. Data like corporate information, customer information, sales information, financial information, product information and any other sources of business material is important to be able to make smart enterprise decisions. Without access to this data, poor decisions are made and the business can suffer.

The recent breaches, especially the intrusions tied to the RSA compromise, has put identity and access management in the spotlight.  Once upon a time, users had to be in the office connected to the network to access corporate applications. IT organizations probably knew the user was since they were sitting at a desk; organizations knew the type of device since it was issued by IT and the business applications were delivered quickly and securely since it was from an internal local area network. Then, users needed access to that same information while they were away from the office and solutions like VPNs and Remote Access quickly gained acceptance. As adoption grew, so did requests for access above and beyond the normal employee. Soon partners, contractors, vendors and other 3rd party ecosystems were given access to corporate resources. Employees and partners from around the globe were connecting from a barrage of networks, carriers and devices. This can be very risky since IT might not know the identity of those users.

imageAnonymous networks allow users to gain access to systems via a User ID and password but they cannot decipher exactly who the user actually is; an employee, guest, contractor, partner and the like. Anonymous networks do have visibility at the IP or MAC address level but that information does not equate to a user's identity. Since these networks are unable to attribute IP to identity, the risk is that information may be available to users who are not authorized to see it. There is also no reporting as to what was accessed or where a specific user has navigated within a system. Unauthorized access to systems is a huge concern for companies, not only pertaining to the disclosure and loss of confidential company data but the potential risks to regulatory compliance and public criticism. It is important that only authenticated users gain admission and that they only access the resources they are authorized to see.  Controlling and managing access to system resources must be based on identity. A user's identity, or their expressed or digitally represented identity can include identifiers like: what you say, what you know, where you are, what you share, who you know, your preferences, your choices, your reputation, your profession or any other combination that is unique to the user. 

Access can mean different things - access to an intranet web application to search for materials, access to MS Exchange for email, access to virtualized Citrix, VMware or Remote Desktop deployments, access to a particular network segment for files and full domain network access as if the user is sitting in the office. The resources themselves can be in multiple locations, corporate headquarters, the data center, at a branch office, in the cloud or a mix of them all.  When users are all over the world, globally distributed access across several data centers can help solve access and availability requirements. Organizations also need their application and access security solution in the strategic point of control, a centralized location at the intersection between the users and their resources to make those intelligent, contextual, identity based decisions on how to handle access requests.

Residing in this important strategic point of control within the network, the BIG-IP Access Policy Manager (APM) for BIG-IP Local Traffic Manager (LTM) along with BIG-IP Edge Gateway (EGW) provide the security, scalability and optimization that's required for unified global access to corporate resources for all types of deployment environments. The ability to converge and consolidate remote users, LAN access and wireless junctions on a single management interface and provide easy-to-manage access policies saves money and frees up valuable IT resources. F5's access solutions secures your infrastructure, creating a place within the network to provide security, scalability, optimization, flexibility, context, resource control, policy management, reporting and availability for all applications.

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Technorati Tags: psilva, F5, context-aware, infrastructure, IP, security, application security, access control, virtualization, network, application delivery, unified application delivery and data services

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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Audio White Paper - Application and Data Security with F5 BIG-IP ASM and Oracle Database Firewall

Organizations need an end-to-end web application and database security solution to protect data, customers, and their businesses. The integrated solution from F5 and Oracle provides improved protection against SQL injection attacks and correlated reporting for richer contextual information.  F5 and Oracle have partnered to offer enhanced security for web-based database applications. The integration between F5 BIG-IP® Application Security Manager (ASM) and Oracle Database Firewall provides richer forensic information about SQL injection attacks through correlated reporting.  Running Time: 17:54  Read full white paper here.  And click here for more F5 Audio.


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