Network World Middle East - March 2011

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    1/48

    www.wokwom.om | Iu 144 | M 2

    PLUS:

    Reality check fo R unified communications

    state unionof the

    SPeciaLfocUSIt trends

    In healthcare

    DiSaSTeR RecoVeRY |ViRTUaL DeSKToPS|WiReLeSS LaN |feMToceLLS | MWc

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    2/48

    TAKE THE OMNISWITCH 10K CHALLENGEDiscover the performance and see

    how it outplays the competition at:

    www.omniswitch10kchallenge.com

    ALCATEL-LUCENTS NEW OMNISWITCH 10K

    IS IN A LEAGUE OF ITS OWN, OFFERING:

    > LESS COST

    > LESS COMPLEXITY

    > LESS COMPROMISE

    WERE

    CHANGINGTHE GAMEWITH

    A CLASS-

    LEADINGDATASWITCH

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    3/48

    24

    32

    COVER STORY

    oCOMMENT

    04 a iff b

    NEWS UPDATE

    06 Zi i fmo i sui

    08 sv kp bouig bk i Q4

    12 Juip pfog cio wi QFbi

    16 Fmo poym mo

    oub i 12 mo

    IN ACTION

    18 dubi siio Oi auoiy up iz og y mi i

    w dr i ik o u

    Fc fbi.

    EVENT REPORT

    20 a bv w wo a ouup of MobiWo cog

    FEATURE

    28 I fy zo30 hy iu

    32 tow Gigbi Wi-Fi iv

    TEST

    38 Mioof bf up sym c wi

    w mou

    NEW PRODUCTS

    40 a gui o om of w pou

    i mk

    LAYER 8

    42 a w fi fo oig

    State of the union:Reality check for unified

    communications

    IssUe 144 | March 2011

    Quick Finder

    Pag 6-22

    Zain, Alcatel-Lucent, Druva, EMC, Qualcomm, Global

    Knowledge, Etisalat, Juniper, Cisco, du, Ericsson, Riverbed,

    Alpha Data, Avaya, STME, DSOA, Ciena, HP Networking

    Pag 23-44

    FVC, NEC, Avaya, Cisco, Microsoft, NetApp, Symantec, eHosting

    DataFort, BT Global Services, Brocade, Zebra Technologies, F5,

    Blue Coat, HP, Siemon, HTC

    28

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    4/48www.newkwdme.m4 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

    EDitorial

    A different beat

    Jvn ThnkppnSenior [email protected]

    PublisherDominic De Sousa

    COONadeem Hood

    Commercial DirectorRichard Judd

    [email protected]+971 4 440 9126

    CMO

    Kimon [email protected]+971 4 440 9149

    EDITORIAL

    Dave [email protected]+971 4 440 9106

    Senior EditorJeevan Thankappan

    [email protected]+971 4 440 9109

    ADVERTISING

    Group Sales ManagerRajashree R Kumar

    [email protected]+971 4 440 9131

    CIO PROGRAMMES

    CIO Programmes and Events LeadKavitha Rajasekhar

    [email protected]+971 4 440 9132

    Strategic Marketing Services LeadSreejith Nambiar

    [email protected]+971 4 440 9133

    MARKETING AND CIRCULATION

    Database and Circulation ManagerRajeesh M

    [email protected]+971 4 440 9147

    PRODUCTION AND DESIGN

    Production ManagerJames P Tharian

    [email protected]+971 4 440 9146

    DesignerFroilan A. Cosgafa IV

    [email protected]+971 4 440 9107

    DIGITALwww.cpilive.net

    www.networkworldme.comwww.cpidubai.com

    WebmasterTristan Troy Maagma

    [email protected]+971 4 440 9141

    Web DesignerJerus King Bation

    [email protected]+971 4 440 9143

    Web DeveloperElizabeth Reyes

    [email protected]

    Published by

    1013 Centre Road, New Castle County,Wilmington, Delaware, USA

    Head OfficePO Box 13700

    Dubai, UAE

    Tel: +971 4 440 9100Fax: +971 4 447 2409

    Printed by

    Printwell Printing Press LLC

    Regional partner of

    Copyright 2011 CPIAll rights reserved

    While the publishers have made every effort to ensurethe accuracy of all information in this magazine, they

    will not be held responsible for any errors therein.

    LTE, more tablets,more apps. That pretty much sums

    up this years Mobile World Congress held in Barcelona.

    This bellwether event for the mobile industry is a good

    place to be in if you want to gauge the mood and get an

    insight into whats in store. If the trends visible at this

    years event are anything to go by, 2011 is going to be a

    pivotal year in the history of mobile communications. LTE

    is already here, a bit earlier than expected, with many

    commercial deployments underway all over the world,

    including Etisalat in the UAE. Many operators in the

    region are already trialling the technology and making

    their networks LTE ready. However, I dont expect any commercial roll outs to happen

    this year, as most regional operators are looking to maximise their 3G assets before

    moving to the next-generation. Besides, the eco-system around LTE in terms of

    devices is not available in the market yet. Spectrum issues could also throw a spanner

    in the works, delaying the deployment. But, what is for sure is that LTE is just a

    question of when, as it offers many compelling reasons for operators, and represents

    a complete paradigm shift a huge shift in focus from voice to data. The portended

    data explosion is going to force many to re-evaluate their current business models, and

    come up with innovative marketing and billing strategies. With data tipped to overtake

    voice big time, many would be left with no choice but to move from the existing

    flat-fee structure to a volume-based billing model, not to mention other significant

    changes in the back-end as LTE is built completely around IP. Will that be the only

    change? I guess the most important change as move to the advanced mobile standard

    is something very fundamental while network coverage makes the difference between

    winners and losers in the market now, tomorrow it is going to be all about who will

    provide more data at a lower cost. Are you ready for that?

    NoT YoUR coPY?I youd like to receive your own copy oNWME every month. Just log on and requesta subscription:www.networkworldme.com

    PUB

    LICA

    TION

    LIC

    ENS

    EDB

    YTH

    EIN

    TER

    NAT

    IONA

    LM

    EDIA

    PRO

    DUC

    TIO

    NZO

    NE,

    DUB

    AITE

    CHN

    OLO

    GY

    AND

    MED

    IAF

    REE

    ZON

    EAU

    THO

    RITY

    www.networkworldme.com | Issue 144 | March2011

    PLUS:

    REALITYCHECKFORUNIFIEDCOMMUNICATIONS

    STATE UNIONofthe

    SPECIALFOCUSITTRENDS

    INHEALTHCARE

    DISASTER RECOVERY|VIRTUALDESKTOPS|WIRELESSLAN|FEMTOCELLS| MWC

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    5/48

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    6/48www.newkwdme.m6 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

    Through this project, the mobile operator

    can experience first-hand how small

    cells effectively address its three main

    challenges: fill mobile coverage holes,

    increase the networks capacity to deal

    with mounting mobile data traffic and

    create new, value-added services in a

    rapid, cost-effective way.

    Zain is the first mobile operator in

    the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to trial

    Femto-based small cells, which clearly

    positions us as an innovator in the

    mobile broadband space, said Dr, Saad

    Al Barrak CEO and Managing Director of

    Zain KSA, Zain. Partnering with Alcatel-

    Lucent, we want to assess how small

    cells can help us provide 5-bar mobile

    coverage to our residential and business

    customers even in circumstances

    where this has traditionally been a

    challenge, such as in in-building and

    rural environments.

    Zain has been looking for ways to

    increase the coverage of its network

    without having to invest in expensive

    macro site deployments. Additionally,

    next to covering white zones, Zain wants

    to continuously improve its customers

    Zain trials femtocells in Saudi

    trUE Fact

    706,000is the number o server units shipped out in the irst quarter o2010 in Europe, the Middle East and Arica. This represents anincrease o 4.4 percent rom the same period last year. Serverrevenue totalled $ 4.3 billion in the ourth quarter o 2010, agrowth o 10.4 percent rom the same quarter last year.

    Source: Gartner

    The Qtel Group announced a commercial

    agreement with Skype, whereby its

    mobile broadband subsidiary wi-tribe, will

    promote Skype and its related products

    over wi-tribes networks in Jordan and the

    Philippines; two key markets for wi-tribe.

    Under the agreement, wi-tribe; a provider

    of wireless broadband Internet, will enable

    customers in the respective markets

    to easily download Skype software and

    connect with their family and friends.

    Dr. Nasser Marafih, Group CEO, Qtel,

    commented: The Qtel Groups strategy for

    innovation is driven by the needs of ourcustomers, and enabled by partnerships

    Qtel Group partnerswith Skype

    quality of experience - offering them the

    best-on-the-market mobile data plans

    with the highest availability and fastest

    access speeds, as well as the latest and

    coolest services.

    As part of this project, we are

    providing Zain with our proven small

    cells product portfolio which is being

    commercially deployed around the

    world, said Adolfo Hernandez, president

    of Alcatel-Lucents activities in EMEA..

    Alcatel-Lucents small cells are plug-and-

    play and enable the creation and delivery

    of a new wide range of value-added

    services through the use of application

    programming interfaces (APIs) - such as

    location, presence and security.

    with like-minded companies. We recognise

    the changes taking place in the market and

    the increasing customer demand for rich

    communications solutions, and so have

    decided to partner with Skype - one of thepioneers in the industry. This is a first-of-its-

    kind in our Middle East region and we look

    forward to working closely with Skype to

    deliver the best possible customer experience.

    Skype had 145 million average monthly

    connected users for the three months

    ended 31 December 2010 and according

    to TeleGeography in January 2011, Skype-

    to-Skype calling minutes in 2010 were

    equivalent to approximately 20% of total

    global international PSTN and Skype-

    to-Skype calling minutes. With todays

    partnership announcement, more users in

    the Middle-Eastern and Asian regions will

    enjoy easy accessibility to popular Skype

    features such as free Skype-to-Skype calls,

    instant messaging, low cost calls to landlines

    and mobiles as well as the recently launchedGroup Video Calling.

    Dr. Nasser Marafih, Group CEO, Qtel

    Alcatel-Lucent has been selected by Zain KSA for the first small cells trial in Saudi

    Arabia, which is expected to augment the mobile service experience.

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    7/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    Your complete source for performance and value!

    Office No. Q4252, Saif Z one, P.O. Box 121456, SharjaUAE . Tel +971 6 557 9397, Fax: +971 6 557 9398, Email: info @multinetf ze.com

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    8/48www.newkwdme.m8 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

    Druva, a company that sells enterprise

    backup software, has announced Druva

    inSync 4.1 Enterprise, an application that the

    company claims to offer near-instantaneous

    automated backups of laptops.An additional tool, included with the 4.1

    release, also allows iPads and iPhones to be

    backed up over a corporate network.

    The inSync application also offers one-click

    restores of any file or backup volume and uses

    block-level data deduplication for backups and

    restores, according to Borja Rosales, EMEA

    Director of Druva.

    Rosales said his companys application can

    be installed by users in less than 20 minutes

    with a five-step procedure and its client-triggered

    EMC has introduced a free Community

    Edition of the its high-performance,

    massively parallel Greenplum Database for

    research and development projects. The

    company said that the new Greenplum

    Database CE offering includes free

    analytic algorithms and data mining tools.

    This is a product designed to

    get people started developing on our

    products and on open source technology,

    Luke Lonergan, CTO of EMCs Data

    Computing Products Division. Its free

    for research and development. If they

    go production and want support, then

    they have to pay license fee, which is per

    terabyte or PC core.

    The Greenplum Database CE business

    analytics tools allow users to view, modify

    and enhance included demo data files.

    The Community Edition can be

    downloaded as a pre-configured VMWare

    virtual appliance for use on laptops

    and desktops, or as a set of packages

    for deployment on user machines. Allusers are free to participate in new

    Greenplum Community Forums to get

    support, collaborate, post ideas, and test

    enhancements developed by various users

    independently, Lonergan said.

    Greenplum CE users can also take

    advantage of the products open-source

    analytic algorithm library, MADlib, to

    give them data mining and machine-

    learning methods for structured and

    unstructured data.

    Druva goes live with inSync

    EMC releasesfree edition ofGreenplum

    Worldwide server revenue and unit

    shipments continued a yearlong recovery in

    the fourth quarter of 2010, but growth is

    likely to slow this year, research company

    Gartner said.

    Revenue for all types of servers grew 16.4

    percent from a year earlier, while the number

    of servers delivered grew 6.5 percent in the

    quarter, Gartner said. The company cited the

    replacement of x86 servers that companies

    had held on to through the global recession

    in 2009, as well as the introduction of the

    Nehalem family of processors from Intel and

    new Opteron chips from AMD late in 2009.

    Gartner believes the replacement of x86

    servers following the economic downturn has

    Server sales kept bouncingback in Q4: Gartnerpassed its peak and will slow this year.

    IBM led the industry in revenue for the

    quarter, with a US$5.2 billion in sales, or

    35.5 percent of the market. Sales of System

    X and mainframe System Z platforms helped

    IBM during the quarter, with the System

    Z line showing a 68.3 percent increase in

    revenue, according to Gartner.

    HP came in behind IBM for revenue,

    with 30.4 percent of the market, but led in

    unit shipments for the quarter, delivering

    767,026 servers or 32.2 percent of the

    total. Dell was the second-biggest vendor by

    shipments in the quarter, with 515,274 or

    21.6 percent of the industry total. Dell was

    also the third-biggest company in revenue.

    Oracle suffered a 40.8 percent drop in

    shipments and a 16.2 percent decline in

    server revenue from last years fourth quarter,

    when its server business was still owned

    by Sun Microsystems. Cisco Systems, in

    its first full year of shipping servers after

    the introduction of its Unified Computing

    System in 2009, earned a market share in

    the low single digits, Gartner said.

    backup architecture enables high levels of

    scalability and security. The inSync application

    also incorporates smart bandwidth throttling

    through its Octopus WAN Optimisation

    Engine, which automatically prioritises networksand schedules backup bandwidth as a percentage

    of overall network bandwidth. The WAN

    optimiser chooses the optimal packet size and

    opens up as many as eight parallel connections

    at the same time.

    Druva inSync 4.1 runs on Windows or

    Linux commodity servers. The servers can

    be configured with solid-state drives (SSDs)

    to enable a hyper cache feature, which

    will increase backup performance as much

    as six-fold.

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    9/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    Poor printing quality, risks of failure, leaks, you certainly

    would not want your business to look that bad. Only HP

    Original Cartridges can guarantee perfect prints and

    smooth printing.

    So look for the following when buying new cartridges for

    your printer:

    a sealed packaging an intact Security label (where present)

    a certied HP Supplier

    and be suspicious of too good to be true offers

    Say it best with Original HP Supplies.hp.com/go/anticounterfeit

    F m fma vwww.hp.cm/m

    All you Are doing by not using HPoriginAl CArtridges is entering

    A dAnger zone.

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    10/48www.newkwdme.m10 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

    Qualcomm has announced its quad-core

    Snapdragon chipset designed to meet the

    requirements of next generation tablets

    and computing devices. The new quad-

    core APQ8064 is the flagship chipset in the

    new family of Snapdragon chipsets and is

    based on the new micro-architecture code

    named Krait. With the purpose of being

    built for mobile devices, this 28nm micro-

    architecture will redefine performance,

    achieving speeds of up to 2.5GHz per core

    and minimizing power consumption and

    heat generation to enable new, thin and

    light form factors.

    The Snapdragon APQ8064 chip

    will be designed to enable the next

    generation of converged computing and

    entertainment devices. These devices will

    have significantly higher performance

    requirements, including support for

    larger screen sizes and resolutions,

    more complex operating systems, multi-

    tasking, multi-channel audio, HD gaming

    and stereoscopic 3D (S3D) photo and

    video capture and playback, as well as

    output in full HD to 1080P flat panel

    displays over HDMI.

    While performance requirements have

    been increasing, battery technology and

    capacity have struggled to develop at

    the same pace. To meet this challenge,

    Qualcomm created its next generation

    architecture and integrated four new,

    low-power CPU cores and its advanced

    Adreno graphics into the APQ8064,

    enabling it to offer twelve times the

    available performance as well as 75

    percent lower power than the first

    generation of Snapdragon processors.

    The combination of advanced processors

    and multimedia technology will provide

    tablets and mobile computing devices

    with unsurpassed performance, battery

    life, low thermal dissipation and the

    broadest set of connectivity options

    available in the industry.

    Etisalat has inked an agreement with

    Alcatel-Lucent (Euronext Paris and NYSE:

    ALU) for a planned deployment of the

    Middle Easts first and widest Long Term

    Evolution (LTE) network in the UAE.Using Alcatel-Lucents end-to-end

    solution, Etisalat will deploy the first

    commercial LTE network in the Middle

    East within the first quarter of 2011.

    On the occasion, Mohammad Omran,

    Chairman of Etisalat commented: As

    the regions leading-edge telecom service

    provider, this is a significant milestone

    for our corporation and we are proud to

    be the Middle Easts first and widest LTE

    IT and business skills training provider

    Global Knowledge has appointed Anders

    Norregaard as its Managing Director

    for UAE & Gulf. Anders joins Global

    Knowledge MEA from Global Knowledge

    Europe where he started his service with

    Global Knowledge in October 2008 as

    Managing Director for Denmark; During

    that time, Anders drove the Danish

    business to one of its most successful

    periods in recent times. Before joining

    Global Knowledge, he spent 5 years as a

    sales director for Arrow ECS in Denmark

    The worlds largest value added IT

    distributor. Anders who is 36 years

    old - has a total of 12 years experience in

    the IT industry mainly focused on Value

    added distribution.

    Etisalat rolls outLTE network

    GlobalKnowledgenames new MD

    Qualcomm debuts quad-coreSnapdragon for next-gen tablets

    network, thereby fulfilling our promise

    to continuously deliver superlative

    communication experiences to our

    customers every step of the way.

    Over the last year weve witnessed a

    200% growth in data roaming traffic. Due

    to the smartphone boom in the UAE, as is

    globally, our customers continue to crave

    for higher speeds and better connectivity.

    There is an exploding demand for new

    technologies and large bandwidth to

    support and enable the surging data

    traffic, said Marwan Zawaydeh, Etisalat.

    We are confident that this advanced

    next-generation network from Alcatel-

    Lucent will meet our customers needs for

    innovative mobile broadband services.

    LTE can accommodate multimedia

    applications such as video conferencing,

    high definition content transmission and

    high speed video downloads from social

    networks, giving Etisalats customers

    faster mobile broadband.Alcatel-Lucent will provide Etisalat with

    a complete end-to-end High Leverage

    Network solution including LTE base

    stations (eNodeBs), all-IP wireless Evolved

    Packet Core (EPC), a converged end-

    to-end network management solution

    and a range of professional services

    including project management, planning,

    installation, commissioning

    and integration.

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    11/48

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    12/48www.newkwdme.m12 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

    The UAE-based SI Alpha Data has

    been certified as a Platinum Business

    Partner with Avaya, a leading global

    provider of B2B communications

    networks and services.

    The Platinum certification is the

    highest Avaya offers and is an industry-

    recognised designation indicating that

    Alpha has met the rigorous technical-competency criteria that ensure the

    delivery of best-in-class customer

    service and support.

    Alpha Data already provides Avaya

    communications systems and services

    to both government and private

    enterprises in the UAE with services

    that include design, implementation

    and technical support to the client

    business.

    As part of the new 5 year managed

    servicesagreement, Ericsson will augment

    dus IT applications and deliver application

    development and maintenance for dus IT

    application landscape.

    Fahad Al Hassawi, Chief Human

    Resources and Shared Services Officer, du,

    says: We have grown rapidly as a company

    ever since we launched operations. To

    maintain the momentum and build on it

    we have chosen Ericsson to partner us in

    the field of IT Application Development.

    Under the terms of the contract,

    Ericsson will develop and maintain

    applications for about 35 platforms and

    technologies, including upgrading and

    consolidation of dus software applications

    domains, transformation of operations

    and enterprise support systems and

    managed services.

    Riverbed has added a level service

    dashboard designed to give business

    executives a high-level view of how

    well applications are performing on

    the network.

    With its WAN optimisation analytics

    platform Cascade 9.0, executives candrill down see if there are performance

    problems that need immediate attention

    or build a historical view of their network

    to plan upgrades, the company says.

    At the same time, the Riverbed has

    upgraded the RiOS operating system

    for its Steelhead WAN optimisation

    appliances. RiOS 6.5 includes

    application-specific optimisation for

    Microsoft Outlook Anywhere and

    Alpha Data goesplatinum with Avaya

    Juniper leapfrogs Cisco withQFabric data centreJuniper Networks has unveiled the

    results of $100 million in research and

    development: a new architecture for data

    centre infrastructure called QFabric,

    formerly code-named Project Stratus. The

    company says QFabric will boost data

    centre throughput 10-fold and be able to

    scale 12 times larger than conventional

    architectures while cutting costs for

    infrastructure and operations. Analysts

    and beta users say they are impressed.

    Four years in the making, QFabric

    promises to flatten data centre

    architecture from two or three layers to

    one, drastically reducing the number

    of devices needed to build a data-centre

    network.

    The new architecture creates what

    is logically a single data centre switch

    overseen by a management platform that

    gives one view of the fabric. QFabric is

    supported by three devices the director

    management platform, the interconnect

    switching fabric and the node, which

    handles ingress and egress ports.

    In making the announcement, the

    company showed three products to support

    QFabric QF Director, QF Internconnect

    chassis and the QFX3500 node.

    The performance improvements that

    QFabric claims would put Juniper ahead

    of Cisco and HP for performance, says

    Rob Whiteley, an analyst with Forrester

    Research. Brocade comes the closest as

    a competitor for a data centre fabric, he

    says, and it remains to be seen how the

    two will stack up. There are no full-fabric

    deployments of either yet, he says.

    Du partners withEricsson

    Riverbed upgradesWAN optimisationplatform

    SMB v2. The new version also includes

    optimization for SSL certificate traffic for

    client machines and for protocols used

    by satellites.

    The software makes it easier to

    configure QoS settings on Steelheads for

    customers who choose to use it rather

    than QoS on their routers. Customers

    rank their applications in importance,

    categorize each site by the bandwidth of

    their WAN connections and set minimum

    and maximum use for classes of activity.The QoS employs the hierarchical fair

    services curves algorithm.

    The devices now take latency into

    consideration when determining how

    to handle individual applications. For

    example, if imposing deduplication on

    traffic would introduce excessive latency

    that would actually increase the time

    it takes for traffic to arrive, the device

    would skip it.

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    13/48

    25th April 2011

    The Westin, Dubai

    RECOGNISING THE MIDDLE EASTS

    NETWORKING CHAMPIONS

    www.networkworldme.com/nwmeawards2011

    SUBMIT YOUR NOMINATIONS

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    14/48www.newkwdme.m14 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    15/48

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    16/48www.newkwdme.m16 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

    Femtocells deployments more

    than double in 12 months

    Informa Telecoms & Media has issued its

    latest femtocell market status report which

    revealed that deployments have more than

    doubled in the past 12 months. The report

    found that although residential services

    represent the overwhelming majority of

    femtocell deployments, the market has also

    started to see particularly strong growth

    in the enterprise sector. Almost a third of

    femtocell deployments now include enterprise

    offerings, contrasting strongly with the

    situation 12 months ago when there were

    no non-residential deployments. It also

    highlighted the importance of the the first

    urban and rural rollouts over this period.

    In total there are now 19 femtocell

    deployments globally compared with nine

    at Mobile World Congress 2010. These

    include six enterprise offerings, two urban

    deployments from Vodafone Qatar and

    Telefonica Spain as well as an outdoor ruralservice from SoftBank in Japan. These

    demonstrate that operator interest is not

    limited to residential services alone. Non-

    residential femtocell services focus on the

    high-value enterprise market, public places

    such as metropolitan environments where

    they provide a capacity boost, and rural areas

    where network coverage has traditionally

    been uneconomical.

    Furthermore, the past quarter has

    also seen important progress in femtocell

    technology. In addition to more powerful

    models that cover larger areas, new low power

    USB-connected femtocell designs promise

    to open up new service opportunities for

    operators. The second femtocell plugfest

    also took place, indicating that the industry

    is close to seeing widespread standardised

    femtocell deployments.

    While residential femtocell deployments

    continue to grow we are seeing changes in the

    market as a whole with operators realising

    the technology can extend to the enterprise,

    rural and urban markets. Enterprise offerings

    are rapidly becoming a standard component

    of all femtocell deployments. Beyond this,

    operators have already started to embrace

    urban femtocells to overcome the coverage

    challenge, and outdoor designs for rural

    markets which could also revolutionise

    developing markets too, said Dimitris

    Mavrakis, Senior Analyst at InformaTelecoms & Media.

    Informa Telecoms & Media expects the

    femtocell market to experience significant

    growth over the next few years, reaching

    just under 49 million femtocell access

    points (FAP) in the market by 2014 with

    114 million mobile users accessing mobile

    networks through femtocells during that year.

    Healthy growth is anticipated throughout

    the forecast period with femtocell unit sales

    reaching 25 million in 2014 alone.

    GOOD BAD UGLY

    E-commerce booms in SaudiA new Arab Advisors Group survey of Saudi

    Arabias Internet users revealed that around

    39% of the adult Internet users in the country

    buy products and pay for services online

    through e-commerce services. Electronics are the

    most popular products bought online, followed by

    software, while airline tickets booking and hotel

    reservations are the top services paid for online.A new major survey of the Internet users in Saudi

    Arabia was concluded by the Arab Advisors Group in

    January 2011. The survey revealed that around 39%

    of adult Internet users in Saudi Arabia buy products

    and pay for services online. The Arab Advisors Group

    conservatively estimates the number of these users

    to be around 3.1 million which is around 12% of thetotal population in Saudi Arabia. These e-commerce

    users have spent an estimated US$ 3 billion onbuying products and paying for services through

    e-commerce transactions in 2010.

    Iranian cyber army strikes againThe pro-Iran hacktivist group that defaced the

    Baidu and Twitter Web sites a year ago has hit

    another target: the U.S. Government's Voice of

    America news site.

    Voice of America was knocked offline temporarily

    after hackers were able to change the organization's

    DNS (Domain Name System) settings, redirecting Web

    traffic hitting Voice of America sites to another site

    controlled by the hackers.Breaking into domain name registration accounts

    and redirecting Web sites is a favorite tactic of

    the Cyber Army, and it has pulled off this attack

    numerous times in recent years. The group posted

    similar messages in the Twitter and Baidu incidents.

    Night Dragon stalks oil and gasThe recent news reports on the Stuxnet virus

    have helped highlight the importance of security

    in process industries like oil and gas. Recently,

    McAfee released a reportdescribing coordinated

    covert and targeted cyber-attacks on the oil and gas

    industry which they attribute to Chinese hackers. Unlike aStuxnet type virus which threatens to disrupt processes,the McAfee report uncovered attempts to hack into

    commercially sensitive data for competitive intelligence

    - attempts which McAfee has named "Night Dragon".

    Security is a top priority for the oil and gas industry. In

    fact, security is often cited by oil and gas companies as

    a barrier to outsourcing or sending data outside of the

    company firewalls. Oil and gas companies hold data suchas detailed well logs and production figures close, while

    being more willing to outsource management of other

    types of data. In this case, it is not exactly clear exactly

    what data was the target.

    BAD

    UGLY

    GOOD

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    17/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    du, the UAEs integrated telecom service

    provider, has converged its fixed and mobile

    IP transport networks using the Cisco CRS

    Carrier Routing System. This will enable

    FMC (Fixed Mobile Convergence) on dus

    network to meet the demand for high-

    end broadband services and makes the

    company unique in its ability to rapidly

    deploy new high-bandwidth mobile

    applications and data packages. Cisco and

    du have collaborated previously to develop

    a portfolio of data and mobility services

    in the UAE. This new phase of network

    development will allow du to improve the

    speed, flexibility and scalability of mobile-

    based services to its customers.

    This is one of the first regional FMC

    projects where all the fixed and mobile

    services run on the same IP network with

    mobile (signaling and bearer), mobile data,

    residential internet, business internet,

    residential voice, enterprise voice,

    international voice, layer 2 VPNs, layer 3

    VPNs and video running on a single IP/MPLS

    core powered by Cisco. This collaboration

    between Cisco and du also paves the way for

    future mobile applications and services to

    dus customers in the UAE. By consolidating

    cores, du is able to offer its customers in

    the UAE a more scalable platform to deliver

    future services at a higher quality. The

    reduction in core equipment and moving to

    latest technology also reduces dus energy

    consumption and reduce carbon footprint.

    Du enters FMC world

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    18/48www.newkwdme.m18 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

    MobilY DEPloYs

    100G NEtWorK

    Saudi Arabian mobile operatorMobily, in partnership with Ciena,has activated what is said to be the

    frst commercial 100 Gigabit per second(Gb/s) network in the Middle East. Thisregional frst, deployed within the Riyadhmetropolitan area, is an extension oMobilys nationwide network.

    Mobily, which owns more than 40 percento Saudi Arabias mobile market, recentlyannounced its selection o optical transportand switching platorms, Carrier Ethernetsolutions, as well as management and

    maintenance services rom Ciena allaimed at supporting high-bandwidthservices. The 100G coherent servicedelivered on Cienas ActivFlex 6500 Packet-Optical Platorm the industrys frstcommercially available system equippedwith coherent 100G optics is key to thatarchitecture. Mobilys new 100G capabilitiesgive the operator the ability to quickly andeasily add network capacity in the crucialmetropolitan area o Riyadh.

    This 100G deployment demonstratesour ongoing ocus on innovation, aimed atbringing leading edge technology oering

    to our customers, said Abdul Aziz AlTamami, Chie Operations Ofcer, Mobily.The demand or bandwidth coming romSaudi businesses is growing steadily, andapplications like video, teleconerencingand cloud computing are uelling asignifcant portion o this growth. Byembracing Cienas 100G coherenttechnology, we are capable o ulfllingthe needs o even the most demanding oour customers, while uture-proofng ournetwork or the years to come.

    Cienas 100G coherent technology willallow or a total throughput o 8.8 Terabits

    o data per second on Mobilys network,carried over 88 optical channels on a singlestrand o optical fber.

    Cienas ActivFlex 6500 platormequipped with coherent 100G optics hasbeen operating in live networks sinceDec 2009 and provides a simple upgradepath rom existing 10G and 40G networks increasing the amount o bandwidthexisting networks can carry by as muchas tenold with minimal networkchanges and investment to cost-eectivelymaximise trafc transport.

    an unprecedented evolution. We have

    chosen STME to implement and update

    our systems with the most efficient

    technology and solutions because

    of their sound understanding of the

    integrated free zone park.

    The project was deployed by STME.

    We have created a high-performance,high-throughput, scalable solution

    that delivers optimum value to the

    IT investments of DSO. Data security

    is paramount for DSO considering

    the nature of its business, which

    is why we have deployed a best-

    of-breed integrated solution for

    storage, backup, disaster recovery,

    and archiving of their email and file

    server, added Ahmed Galal, Sales &

    Marketing Director, STME.

    By using Symantec Storage

    Foundation, solutions such as

    high availability for critical

    servers with remote failover, archiving

    and enhanced backup were also offered.

    The new solutions has successfully

    eliminated a Single Point of Failure,

    simplified IT administration, reducedoperational costs, and accelerated vital

    IT processes such as the recovery of files

    on Network-Attached Storage after user-

    initiated file deletions.

    Abdulsalam Bastaki, Vice-President

    of IT at Dubai Silicon Oasis Authority,

    said: It is essential for us at Dubai

    Silicon Oasis to make sure that

    our systems are in line with all ICT

    developments, especially at a time when

    the technology sector is witnessing

    An arrayof capabilities

    Dubai Silicon Oasis has set up a centralised storage

    array at the Main Site as well as a disaster recovery(DR) site linked to a redundant Fiber Channel Fabric

    inn: Dsoa

    L-R: Abdulsalam Bastaki, Vice-President of IT at Dubai Silicon Oasis Authority and Ahmed Galal, Sales & Marketing Director, STME

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    19/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    Why is CommVault positioned as a leader inthe 2011 Magic Quadrant for Enterprise

    Disk-Based Backup /RecoveryReport?*

    The 13,500 customers worldwide who trust us to solve their data management challenges

    could answer this question or you 13,500 dierent ways.

    But i you dont have time to poll them, get the ull Gartner

    report and more at commvault.com/ITLeaders . Or, to set

    up a personal conversation about how we can help you, call

    our middle east ofce in Dubai at +971 4 3753491.

    1207 Al Thuraya Tower 2nPO Box 502224nDubai UAE

    Headquarters : 2 Crescent PlacenOceanport, NJ 07757

    Regional Ofces: EuropenMiddle East & AricanAsia-PacifcnLatin America & CaribbeannCanadanIndianOceania

    www.commvault.com

    1999-2011 CommVault Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. CommVault, the CV logo, Solving Forward, and Simpana are trademarks or registered trademarks o CommVault Systems, Inc. All other third party brands,products, service names, trademarks, or registered service marks are the property o and used to identiy the products or services o their respective owners. All specifcations are subject to change without notice.

    Backup & Recovery > Archive > VM Protection > Deduplication > Snapshot Management > eDiscovery

    *The Magic Quadrant is copyrighted 2011 by Gartner, Inc. and is reused with permission. The Magic Quadrant is a graphical representation o a marketplace at and or a specifc time period. It

    depicts Gartners analysis o how certain vendors measure against criteria or that marketplace, as defned by Gartner. Gartner does not endorse any vendor, product or service depicted in theMagic Quadrant, and does not advise technology users to select only those vendors placed in the Leaders quadrant. The Magic Quadrant is intended solely as a research tool, and is not meantto be a specifc guide to action. Gartner disclaims all warranties, express or implied, with respect to this research, including any warranties o merchantability or ftness or a particular purpose.

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    20/48

    Mobile broadband and LTE hoggedthe limelight at this years Mobile

    World Congress in Barcelona

    A bravenew world

    The industry seems to have learned

    itslessons from 3G, which was

    beset with problems when it came

    out ten years ago, and is now focusing on

    robustness and quality of service in the 4G.

    Though these are early days for LTE, the

    mobile industry is bullish about the next-

    generation, which is all about data.

    At the show, mobile gear manufacturer

    Ericsson presented its vision of the world

    in 2020. Called Networked Society, it

    envisions a world with 50 billion devices

    with microprocessors connected to

    network, many of them wirelessly. Buoyed

    by a high demand for mobile broadband

    solutions, the Swedish giant is betting on

    a world where all microprocessors that

    not connected today will be connected,

    resulting in the number of connections in

    tens of billions.

    We have deployed networks all overthe world. Next 20 years will see those

    networks being used in ways never

    imagined, with a huge impact on people,

    enterprise organisation and society in

    general. We believe three components will

    make the difference in a networked society

    mobility, broadband and cloud, said

    Hans Vestberg, President and CEO.

    Ericssons vision is one of machine

    to machine (M2M) communication,

    which means we can actually start using

    even |mobile world congress

    www.newkwdme.m20 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    21/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    machines in a way that they talk to each

    other and this is a major change relative

    to how we have been communicating

    in the past. The technology enablers for

    this universally connected world are

    broadband ubiquity and the declining cost

    of connected devices, he added.

    Vestbergs talk on machine to

    machine networking ecosystems included

    descriptions and examples of smart

    networks, smart services and smart cities.

    Ericsson says 5.3 billion people are

    connected worldwide today, which is

    expected to reach 7-8 billion by 2015.

    Broadband penetration has, of course,

    been the most important factor for

    operators around the world. Every 1000

    new mobile broadband subscriptions

    generate 80 new jobs, which is why

    governments need to think about

    broadband infrastructure. We expect one

    billion people to have mobile broadband

    subscriptions this years, which can

    reach up to five billion by 2016; the data

    consumption will be 25 percent higher,

    with video accounting for the major chunk

    of traffic, said Vestberg.

    Ericsson says 500 million smartphones

    are already on networks and by 2016 there

    will be as much data on smartphones as

    PCs, and more data capacity on networks

    than voice.

    To support M2M communications and

    hook up operators to cloud, Ericsson has

    launched Device Connection Platform at

    the show, which makes it possible to create

    tailored connectivity and price plans for

    M2M services. Ericsson provides a complete

    service that the operators can adjust toserve its enterprise customers needs,

    including a self-service interface, flexible

    billing, charging and connectivity plans

    for all devices connected to the network.

    Since machine to machine applications

    can communicate using any existing IP

    protocol they can be accessed and share

    data via internet. In addition, the operators

    customer will be able to manage their

    subscriptions and devices in real time.

    In tune with the shift from host-to-host

    connections to a focus on connections

    from users to networks and vice versa,

    Ericsson is expanding its IP networking

    portfolio, with several new solutions to be

    rolled out during 2011. At the show, it has

    taken the wraps off its first solution in the

    portfolio Smart Service Router, which

    the company says will form the basis of

    the new mobile core network needed in

    4G/LTE networks.

    Though the show this year was

    all about LTE, which is expected to

    come early, Ericsson says HSPA will

    continue to evolve in parallel to LTE.

    The manufacturer has demonstrated

    multi-carrier HSPA with 168Mbps on

    the downlink and 24Mbps on the uplink

    using a prototype consumer device and

    commercial network equipment. This is

    said to be a world record for the highest

    HSPA speed achieved on commercial

    network equipment.

    To reach 168M bps, Ericsson used

    a number of radio tricks, including

    antenna technology MIMO (Multiple-Input

    Multiple-Output) and sending data over

    several channels at the same time. MIMO

    uses multiple antennas in the base station

    and on the device to increase speeds.

    Besides HSPA at 168M bps, Ericsson

    has also demonstrated HSPA with 42M bps

    using a single channel and 84M bps using

    two channels. Operators already offer

    HSPA at 42M bps, but they have to use

    two channels. By only using one channel

    aided by MIMO, operators can be much

    more efficient with their valuable radio

    spectrum, Ericsson said.

    Today, 79 commercial HSPA networks

    offer download speeds of 21M bps. Add to

    that 13 commercial HSPA networks that

    can offer up to 42M bps, and five operators

    that have committed to HSPA at 84M bps,

    according to the latest statistics from the

    Global mobile Suppliers Association.

    Another major area of push for

    Ericsson is manager services, which

    accounts for 10 percent of the net sales for

    the company. Its services organisation now

    boasts of 45000 professional and has won

    54 managed services contract in 2010.

    Though the showthis year wasall about LTE,

    which is expected to comeearly, Ericsson says HSPAwill continue to evolve inparallel to LTE.

    EricssoN airssMallEr MobilEbasE statioNs

    Ericsson has joined the move towardsusing smaller mobile base stations,

    launching Ericsson Air (antennaintegrated radio), which aims to reduce

    power consumption while expandingcoverage to more areas.

    For mobile subscribers, the Air basestations can open the door to coverage

    where there was none beore, such asin street and indoor environments that

    are hard to reach with traditional base

    stations, according to Jan Hglund, vicepresident and deputy head o product

    area IP and broadband at EricssonsNetworks unit.

    The Air base stations integrate theantenna unit into the radio unit. The frst

    generation o the product will put thebaseband unit, which handles the data

    and call processing, into a separate box.But in the uture it will also be integrated

    into the main unit, according to Ericsson.The Air base stations can be used in

    2G, 3G and LTE (Long Term Evolution)

    networks, and will come in dierentsizes. The smallest ones will be the

    size o a one-liter milk carton, and cancover an area with a cell radius o up to

    about 100 meters, according to ChristianHedelin, head o radio product marketing

    at Ericssons Networks unit.

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    22/48

    We organised a CIO roundtable in Kuwait to discussthe changing paradigm in networking in the contexto emerging technologies, which yielded some goodadvice on network transormation

    Changing the rules

    B

    olstered by 3Com acquisition

    anda new go-to-market

    moniker, HP Networking has set

    its sights on Cisco in networking battle.

    Against this backdrop, the company in

    association with Network World Middle

    East organised a roundtable discussion

    in Kuwait to debate the changing rules

    of networking and how HP Networking

    is enabling customers to build next-gen

    infrastructure.

    The current networking paradigm

    saps resources from IT innovation and

    perpetuates a siloed approach to IT.

    Networks are too complex, inflexibleand costly. In addition, the boundaries

    between the network and data centre

    infrastructure limit IT agility and leave

    critical resources underutilized.

    With the acquisition of 3Com, HP

    is bringing an end to this inefficient

    model, enabling convergence that

    accelerates business growth at a lower

    total cost of ownership. We have

    solutions that span from edge of the

    network to the heart of the data centre,

    said Khaled Ibrahim El Desouky, Pre Sales

    Technical Consultant, HP Networking.

    He said customers are looking

    for ways to break from business

    limitations imposed by the networking

    paradigm that has been dominated by

    a single vendor. We are delivering a

    common platform, single operating

    system, and single pane of glass

    management. We are offering open

    industry standards and market-driven

    innovation, with security solutions

    and intelligence integrated into the

    secure network fabric.

    Desouky also explained the reasonswhy HP Networking is emerging as a

    credible alternative in the networking

    market. Customers are telling us that

    one of the reasons why the cost of

    managing and deploying networking

    infrastructure hadnt changed over

    the years was because a competitor

    that held a majority position in the

    market just kept adding, adding, adding

    more features without lowering their

    cost, and many of these features were

    features the customer never used. We

    will deploy for you exactly what you

    need, and then were going to translate

    that to you in business value that you

    wont get anywhere else.

    He claimed what differentiates

    HP networking from a technology

    standpoint is the intelligence that

    its brings to the table, which enable

    customers to deploy the network fabric

    and network architecture in much

    simpler ways, that will open up new

    opportunities for business growth. We

    have got one management solution end

    to end. Weve got Intelligent Resilient

    Framework technology, which allows

    you to do clustering performance and

    leading-edge bandwidth access.

    This was followed by a presentation

    by Arun George, Technical Sales Manager,

    HP TippingPoint on the some of the

    burning issues around virtualisaiton

    security, where the threats are new and

    the traditional security tools dont cut

    it anymore.

    To address the unique

    requirements of the virtualised data

    center, we are offering TippingPoint

    Secure Virtualisation Framework

    (SVF), which is designed specifically

    for implementing best-of-breed

    threat protection for the virtualized

    infrastructure. We are extending our

    threat research capabilities, breadth

    of protection, ease-of-use, and

    automation capabilities to include

    virtual infrastructure.

    HP TippingPoint is also offering

    active theat blocking, which filters

    and detect malicious traffic and stop it

    before it can compromise or damage the

    virtualised data centre infrastructure orits data assets.

    The roundtable was attended by

    Farhan Baboojee, Sr. Regional Manager

    IT Ops, Agility; Imran Saleh, IT Special

    Consultant, PACE; Fahad Almenayes,

    Executive Management Technical

    Support and System Operations, Al Ahli

    Bank of Kuwait; Ahmed Helal, Manager-

    IT, Al Muzaini Exchange; and Rehman

    Shaik, Senior Technical Support

    Engineer, Al Shaya.

    www.newkwdme.m22 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

    even |networking

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    23/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    Home User

    PacksS.M.B. Packs Available

    FREE+

    +97143939222 +97143936222

    Partners Inquiries Are Welcomed.

    Contact : +971 55 227 8622

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    24/48

    While many businesses

    tightenedtheir IT budgets

    during the recent recession,

    a growing number of organisations

    are deploying unified communications

    solutions integrated voice, data,

    messaging, conferencing and

    collaboration services over converged

    networks as confidence creeps back

    and budgets expand. The driver?

    Return on investment.

    For the uninitiated, UC solutions

    quickly increase an organisations

    productivity and reduce operating

    costs. UC not only provides more

    reliable and cross-functional

    communication, but also increases

    resilience against network disruptions.

    In addition, UC enhances the sense of

    belonging and affinity amongst remote

    or mobile workers.

    However, getting to a UC platform

    takes careful thought and planning.

    Definitions of unified

    communications are as plentiful as the

    companies that provide the component

    technologies. As such, there is no such

    thing as one-size-fits-all. However,

    there are several broad ways to

    approach UC on a single platform.

    feue |unifed communications

    Reality check fo R unified communications

    state unionof the

    www.newkwdme.m24 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    25/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    Many businesses are pursuing

    either rich media or telephony-centric

    approaches to implementation, while

    others are focusing on e-mail- or

    instant messaging-centric approaches.

    Admittedly, the array of available

    technologies, combined with their

    unique implications, make selecting a

    UC solution a complex undertaking.

    There are many things to consider

    when deciding what is right for your

    company, including the nature of your

    organisations work and its physical

    structure.

    One of the most obvious concerns

    has to be bandwidth optimisation.

    Since UC involves real time voice

    and video, CIOs need to have a

    closer look at their bandwidth

    and their prioritisation in terms

    of services and traffic. The second

    is the local ISP infrastructure and

    regulations and what these cover. If

    the communications system covers

    several branches across the region,

    then the local WAN links and basic

    infrastructure needs to be set up

    to handle the traffic that these

    applications can (and will) generate,

    says Dharmendra Parmar, GM

    Marketing, FVC.

    Frits Neyndorff, MD of NEC

    Unified Solutions, says in addition to

    the infrastructure concerns such as

    bandwidth, one of the key challenges

    for companies is changing user habits

    and processes among the staff andproviding the right level of skills and

    training to ensure that they make the

    most optimal use of the solutions.

    Another common area of concern

    is how will it affect network security?

    Some of the most common concerns

    companies have is security, reliability

    and user adoption. Network security in

    UC is not any different from having a

    voice or data infrastructure. Network

    security in UC is all about user

    privileges and access, says Mohammed

    Areff, MD Gulf & Pakistan, Avaya.

    Many of the obstacles faced in UC

    implementations stem from at least

    one of the following:

    1. Rushed discovery phase its

    easier to address challenges prior

    to implementation, so this phase

    should carefully assess all potential

    applications and systems that link to

    the communications platform or may

    be affected by the change in traffic2. Assumption that equipment/

    applications can be transferred as is

    from existing systems it is important

    to clarify this before investing.

    3. Lack of stakeholder involvement

    in the process since UC is not an

    IT-only decision, youll only capture

    the maximum benefit if you secure

    the users input during the discovery,

    planning, and implementation process.

    4. Failure to establish a goal and stick

    to it this is where UC solutions can

    become needlessly complicated, leading

    to unanticipated costs.

    Identify the weakest link in the chain

    If your network is not strong enough

    to handle an increase in traffic from

    UC, you will not get the results you

    are expecting. Review your current

    business and network environments,

    assess current and future needs, and

    incorporate them into a scope of

    work for design and implementation.

    For most companies, unifying

    communications is not a one-size-

    fits-all, packaged solution. It is a

    phased process, leading to an end goal

    that meets business/organisational

    communication goals. What is best

    for your company is a network andsolution set that stays up and running

    when the weakest link is at or near

    maximum capacity.

    Finally, remember that training

    your associates on the maintenance

    and use of the UC components is

    essential. Begin preparing them for

    implementation during installation

    and configuration. Again, your goal is

    to launch a reliable operating system

    without disrupting business as usual.

    If your network isnot strong enoughto handle an

    increase in traffic from UC,you will not get the resultsyou are expecting.

    Frits Neyndorff, MD of NEC Unified Solutions

    Dharmendra Parmar, GM Marketing, FVC

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    26/48www.newkwdme.m26 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011 www.newkwdme.m

    feue |unifed communications

    Once viewed as a luxury that only

    large organisations with hefty IT

    budgets could afford, UC solutions are

    now within reach of organisations of

    all sizes, including many small and

    midsize businesses (SMBs).

    At this stage of time and after

    few years of penetration in the

    enterprises, UC is within the reach

    of any organization. The level of UC

    penetration might differ as some

    organisations may focus on mobility,

    others on voice, video and web

    conferencing, says Wael Abdulal,

    Collaboration Manager, Cisco UAE.

    Microsoft, which has recently

    launched its Lync server, says users will

    no longer need to invest in expensive

    hardware to adopt UC. In fact, you

    dont need to even own any hardware

    if you opt for the cloud based or

    partner hosted version of Microsofts

    UC solution. Owning hardware/IT

    infrastructure is one of the key blockers

    for small organizations while we offer a

    comprehensive enterprise solutions for

    some of our large customers. We have

    references to support UC for business

    from 5 seats to 100K seats, says Yasir

    Khokhar,Information Worker Business

    Group lead, Microsoft Gulf.

    Parmar from FVC adds that as UC

    leverages voice, video, social media

    and other communications into a more

    converged platform, there is a wider

    range of solutions available to suit thebudgets and needs of organisations,

    whatever the size. Organisations can

    start with a simple solution using

    voice/text messaging, and scale all

    the way to conference room video

    conferencing solutions.

    Payback time

    While the goals of UC are admirable, it

    is not always easy to sell management

    on the idea of a revamped,

    companywide communications

    system. However, once management

    understands the benefits of UC, they

    may realise it is just the kind of

    enhancement they are looking for.

    Well, its true that some of the

    benefits of UC are not very easy to

    measure. It also depends on the size andthe extent of how the systems are used.

    Some of the clear, measurable areas

    are productivity, in terms of increased

    communication and collaboration,

    access to resources that would normally

    be out of reach, and time savings and

    costs in terms of travel especially at

    executive levels, says Parmar.

    Areff from Avaya adds that

    enhanced productivity, employee

    retention, cost reductions from staff

    travel are just some of the factors

    that CIOs could consider while cost

    justifying a UC system.

    Another option is to look at a hosted

    UC system, which offers incredible cost

    savings when compared to in-house,

    thanks in large part to eliminating

    the need for hardware, software and

    licenses. Alongside the reduced need

    for hardware and software, staffing

    costs can also be easily manager, as a

    hosted solution doesnt require a large

    team of internal experts to deal with

    upgrades or maintenance.

    This would depend on the needs of

    the organisation and where security can

    play a very key role in deciding what

    kind of systems to deploy. On-premise

    deployment does have the advantage ofenhanced control, but hosted systems

    give these organisations the possibility

    of more flexibility, says Neyndorff.

    While unified communications is a

    complicated field with many potential

    challenges, it can undoubtedly help

    transform an organisation, and result

    in attractive operating efficiencies. The

    facts speak for themselves UC is on

    the rise as an innovative way to change

    the way your company does business.

    While the goalsof UC areadmirable, it is

    not always easy to sell

    management on the idea ofa revamped, companywidecommunications system.

    Mohammed Areff, MD Gul f & Paki stan, Avaya Wael Abdulal , Col laborati on Manager, Cis co UAE

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    27/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    Under the patronage of H.E. Sultan Bin Saeed Al Mansoori, UAE Minister of Economy

    The Middle Easts Leading

    Enterprise Communications

    Exhibition & Conference

    Delivering Enterprise Decision makers:

    Government Oil & Gas Public Sector Healthcare Banking & Finance

    Construction Retail Manufacturing Hospitality & more...

    16 - 18 May 2011Abu DhabiNationalExhibition Centre

    www.mecomexpo.com

    For sponsorship and space booking, contact the MECOM team on +971 4 3365161 or [email protected]

    Organised byResearch Partner

    Media Partner

    Online Media PartnerPublishing Partner

    Silver Sponsor Associate Sponsor Gold Media Sponsor Gold Media PartnerDiamond Media Partnerd Sponsor

    Featuring

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    28/48

    feue |disaster recovery

    applications dont get a second chance, and

    those that fail to reduce their operational

    expenses may suffer the same fate. All

    these factors driving the prioritisation of

    business continuity and disaster recovery

    as top priority, says Ahmed Hassan, AreaTechnical Manager, NetApp Middle East.

    Wouter Vancoppenol, Regional Sales

    Director of Double-Take (now part of

    Vision Solutions), adds another perspective:

    Business continuity is an increasing

    concern for enterprises locally - they are

    following the same company growth and

    user demand curves that we have seen

    in other regions. This requirement for

    services to be available at all times is a

    pressing one, and means that companies

    28 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011 www.newkwdme.m

    In thesafety zone

    With the outages costing dearly, businesscontinuity and disaster recovery are

    emerging as top priorities or regionalbusinesses. Here is what you need to

    know to plan right

    Anthony Harrison, Senior Principal Solution Specialist Storage and Server Management, Symantec

    Businesses

    are generally

    confidentabout

    the resilience of their IT

    systems until disaster strikes

    and disruptions ensue. Most f the

    businesses in the region have experiences

    significant network disruptions during

    the last 12 month, either in the form of

    political turmoil, power loss, hardware

    failures or a loss of telecom servicesto facilities. Most of these disruptions

    could have been reduced or avoided by

    implemented by implementing a more

    comprehensive business continuity and

    disaster recovery plan.

    To compensate for the unexpected

    and account for the unpreventable,

    prudent organisations utilize business

    continuity products and services plans

    to keep their enterprises up and running

    in emergencies, and implement disaster

    recovery

    plans and

    programs

    against the

    possibility that a

    computer, server, office

    or entire building becomes

    unusable as a result of a

    catastrophe.

    Business continuity and disaster

    recovery technologies are becoming

    less expensive and easier to use, in part

    because they are being integrated into

    larger IT systems, and also because theyre

    increasingly taking advantage of aspects of

    cloud computing and virtualisation. There

    are many factors that driving this as a toptechnology priority for organisations in

    the Middle East.

    Enterprises today are facing the

    perfect storm. Challenging economic

    times are compelling businesses to achieve

    even greater levels of cost savings and

    operational efficiency. Yet business-critical

    applications still require vital data to be

    protected and available to meet increasing

    service-level demands. The majority of

    businesses that fail to protect their critical

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    29/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    are looking at developing how their

    business can survive through a disaster

    through investing in high availability

    and / or disaster recovery planning and

    solutions.

    He points out at the industries in the

    region that have been successful especially

    banking and finance has seen a huge

    demand for business continuity as more

    services are rolled out via the internet to

    online users. Internet banking requires

    that systems are available around the clock,

    which has made investment in continuity

    part of a wider company strategy. Other

    industries like has seen the same business

    driver - customers are more demanding,

    and they wont accept downtime.

    It is important for CIOs to make a

    distinction between business continuity and

    disaster recovery, which are often thought

    of as the same thing. Disaster recovery is

    about re-establishing IT services in the faceof large-scale hardware failure or sabotage,

    facilities failure and/or regional natural

    disaster. Disaster-recovery capabilities are

    measured by the amount of time it takes

    to re-establish services and the amount of

    data loss. Business continuity is the ability

    to continue operations with little or no

    downtime in some of these scenarios.

    These two different perspectives on

    the same core problem how do I deal

    with an event that is unlikely to happen

    but could be big enough to threaten my

    business? Disaster recovery has tended to

    be viewed as data replication, and business

    continuity extends that idea to include the

    servers, their configuration, the office space

    and equipment and indeed the complete

    business process, says Anthony Harrison,

    Senior Principal Solution Specialist

    Storage and Server Management, Symantec.

    He cites the example of a telco, for

    which DR could include the system that

    houses all of their call data records so they

    do not lose track of their primary revenue

    source, but business continuity would

    include the application to generate the

    bills at the end of that month, the printers

    to print the completed statements and

    the people to send them in the post to

    ensure that the companys cash flow is

    not impacted.

    Mohamed Rizvi, Manager- InformationSecurity and Advisory Services at eHosting

    DataFort, defines DR as an arrangement

    related to the preparation for recovery or

    continuation of technology infrastructure,

    which is critical to an organisation during

    a disaster. It is a sub-set of business

    continuity and focuses on IT systems that

    support business functions.

    While many regional businesses believe

    they are prepared for an unplanned

    network disruption, many are not and yet

    the most common causes of IT outages are

    addressable by having a well-defined DR

    plan in place. What should companies keep

    in mind while formulating a plan? The

    main requirement should be to determine

    the value of data and infrastructure you are

    trying to protect with DR. Understanding

    the value is key to determining the funding

    an organization would put forward for

    their DR strategy, says Tareque Choudhury,

    Head of Security Practice and Professional

    Services MEA, BT Global Services

    Harrison from Symantec says that taking

    the simplistic view of just copy the data

    offsite and well worry about the rest later

    represents a very high cost in terms of

    duplicated storage requirements (usually of

    the same model of high-end array), because

    there is no appreciation of the business

    value of the data. We always advise a

    more granular approach to understand

    the business value both of the data and the

    applications that access it.

    According to Vancoppenol, the first

    step is to understand what your critical

    applications are- that the business relies

    on in order to be profitable. These are

    the first that should be protected, either

    through deploying high availability or

    disaster recovery solutions. The second is

    to know what platforms you are running:

    even smaller organisations tend to have a

    mix of different server hardware in place,

    which makes planning how to protect

    the applications running on those servers

    potentially more difficult. Look at how to

    protect these multiple platforms with one

    tool, rather than having different productsfor each one. This is a more cost-effective

    approach, and secondly it makes it easier

    to spot any potential gaps in the DR plan,

    he adds.

    With the cost of downtime going up,

    sometimes even battening businesses down,

    the pressure on IT organisations is now

    more than ever to ensure their DR plan is

    ready to go and unfailingly reliable. Think

    you are ready about just about anything?

    Think again.

    Mohamed Rizvi, Manager- Information Securityand Advisory Services at eHosting DataFort

    Tareque Choudhury, Head of Security Practice andProfessional Services MEA, BT Global Services

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    30/48www.newkwdme.m30 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

    feue |healthcare

    Healthcare in Middle East is going digital, which bringsboth tremendous opportunities and security risks

    Healthy attitude

    Healthcare information technology

    is expected to play a major role

    in meeting the demand for

    care, quality, and safety, while bridging

    the gap to affordability. Healthcare

    providers and players in the Middle East

    are faced with the challenge of making

    transformative changes to care delivery

    and business models to respond to the

    changing technology landscape , which

    is essential to achieve cost savings and

    efficiency goals.

    The healthcare industry in general

    is conservative when it comes to

    technology - after all, patient care is at

    stake. However, in recent years healthcare

    has accelerated adoption of technology

    compared to other industries as a way to

    deliver high quality care while keeping

    costs in line, says Ali Ahmar, Regional

    Sales Manager, Brocade Communications

    Today, theres the widespread

    migration from paper- and film-basedto electronic medical/ health records,

    adoption of wireless technologies for

    medical monitoring as well as bedside

    care delivery, increased use and capability

    of medical imaging (PACS, CT, MRI, etc.)

    technology, unified communications,

    and high availability/ disaster recovery

    solutions are the current technology

    trends, he adds.

    Perhaps, the biggest disruptive

    technology transformation in the industry

    is the move towards electronic health

    records (EHRs). Electronic records not only

    allow general practitioners and specialists

    to document and easily share patient

    information; they also help support

    evidence-based medicine. That allows

    physicians to treat patients using best

    practices derived from the systematic,

    scientific study of standard treatments.

    Given the huge upfront costs involved,

    some industry experts believe a software-

    as-a-service (SaaS) EHR model would

    be the most cost-effective and least

    complicated deployment for medical

    practices, clinics and hospitals unable

    to afford in-house IT equipment. Under

    a SaaS model, EHR applications such

    as physician-order-entry systems are

    hosted on servers in a vendor facility

    and hospitals would access those systems

    through a secure Internet portal or via

    a virtual private network. That way, the

    health care facility would not need todeploy hardware and software in its data

    centre or hire the IT staffers needed to

    support and maintain an EHR system.

    Health goes mobile

    Smartphones, tablet PCs and other

    wireless devices are poised to play a

    greater role in health care as doctors and

    patients embrace the mobile Internet.

    Smartphones allow doctors to check

    e-mail, use mobile applications and surf

    the Web, and also lead to collaboration

    between physicians and patients.

    In fact, a recent research report

    suggests that smartphone apps are set to

    become the killer health care product asa research report projects that some 500

    million people will be using them within

    five years.

    According to the Global Mobile Health

    Market Report 2010-2015 compiled by

    research2guidance, more than a third

    of 1.4 billion smartphone users in 2015

    will be running some kind of mobile

    healthcare application.

    Mobile health (mHealth) applications

    allow doctors to monitor patients, no

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    31/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    matter where they are, in real time. The

    emergence of consumer health electronics

    devices like portable ECG machines, blood

    pressure monitors and weight scales can

    help physicians seamlessly capture andtransmit patient information from home,

    work or from the road.

    According to a report released by

    Accenture earlier this year, the rise

    of inexpensive Internet connectivity

    along with the development of smaller,

    cheaper and smarter health electronic

    devices should help health care workers

    deliver better, more efficient health care

    to patients.

    Wireless technology, specifically

    the adoption of 802.11n is one of the

    most transformational technologies in

    healthcare. With the proliferation of

    medical monitoring devices as well as

    the broad adoption of PDAs, tablet PCs

    and smart phones, wireless technology is

    enabling healthcare providers to monitor

    and deliver care whenever and wherever

    needed. Mobile devices free from wired

    terminals and combined with wireless

    access have become extremely important

    to healthcare providers giving them

    ready access to patient information and

    the ability to diagnose and treat patients

    more quickly, regardless of their physical

    location in the hospital complex: wards,

    clinics, special-care units and so on,

    says Ahmar.

    RFID is also set to play a crucialrole, according to Wael Hasan,

    Territory Manager Middle East,

    Zebra Technologies. The use of RFID

    in healthcare is vital to minimizing

    errors in patient treatment and revising

    process that were previously very

    time consuming. When talking about

    solutions for the Middle East, integration

    is definitely a buzz word for the market.

    The fact is that patient histories

    especially those dating back to the

    pre-computer eraare incredibly time

    consuming to review if not recorded

    digitally. In areas like medication

    administration, additional time and costs

    are incurred as some facilities still rely on

    centralized networks which can only be

    accessed from the pharmacy floor or the

    back office. These bulky and immobile

    systems of the past are becoming

    exponentially more difficult to manage.

    From staff ID cards to mobile printers

    and patient wristbands, the combination

    of RFID technologies becoming available

    in the Middle East presents incredible

    opportunities for healthcare providers,

    he adds.

    The rapidly changing technology

    landscape in the healthcare sector,

    especially the transition to EHRs, isstressing existing networks. Industry

    experts point out a medical-grade

    network that can guarantee continuous

    high performance is the need of the hour.

    At the same time, high performance

    needs to be matched with high security.

    Confidential patient information is

    among the most sensitive data that exists,

    and, in most jurisdictions, is subject

    to a host of legislative and regulatory

    controls, sums up Ahmar.

    Ali Ahmar, Regional Sales Manager, Brocade CommunicationsWael Hasan, Territory Manager MiddleEast, Zebra Technologies

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    32/48www.newkwdme.m32 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

    Todays existing state-o-the art wireless LAN canachieve 300 Mbps using 802.11n with two spatialstreams. Future developments will deliver three-and our-stream speeds o up to 600 Mbps. Butthe 802.11 working group has set its sights on amore ambitious milestone: 1 Gbps throughput.

    Toward a Gigabit

    Wi-Fi nirvanaA

    fter considering several

    approaches for getting

    to gigabit speeds, the

    802.11 WG settled on two related

    approaches, and formed two task

    groups to produce future gigabit

    standards: 802.11ac and 802.11ad.

    While both groups share the same

    goal, the approaches taken are

    ehupde

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    33/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    different because the groups have

    fundamentally different purposes.

    Fundamentally, all wireless LAN

    standards depend on access to radio

    spectrum. 802.11ac will be designed

    for use at frequencies under 6 GHz,

    which in practice refers to the

    existing radio spectrum available

    today in the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands

    used by 802.11a/b/g/n. Therefore, an

    important component of the work

    in Task Group AC will be to design

    backward-compatibility mechanisms

    to peacefully coexist with existing

    networks.

    Higher data rates in 802.11ac

    are supported by a set of familiar

    techniques. Once again, the speed

    will be supported by well-understood

    OFDM techniques, another bump

    up in the size of radio channels,

    and MIMO. Advances in both chip

    manufacturing technology and

    processing power have also made it

    possible to use more sensitive coding

    techniques that depend on finer

    distinctions in the received signal

    as well as more aggressive error

    correction codes that use fewer check

    bits for the same amount of data.

    Wider radio channels support

    higher speeds. Just as 802.11n

    provided a leap in speed by doubling

    channel width from 20 MHz to 40

    MHz, 802.11ac provides a bump inthroughput with still-wider 80 MHz

    channels. At 80 MHz, channel layout

    once again becomes a challenge,

    even in the relatively expansive 5

    GHz spectrum. Manufacturers will

    need to adapt automatic radio tuning

    capabilities to offer higher-bandwidth

    channels only where necessary to

    conserve spectrum.

    Increasing data rates through

    efficiency is an important goal of

    every new 802.11 standard. One

    common measure of efficiency is the

    number of megabits transmitted per

    megahertz of spectrum (Mbps/MHz).

    802.11 began life at 0.1 Mbps/MHz,

    and current 802.11n standards have

    pushed that figure to 7.5 Mbps/MHz.

    Several efficiency enhancements are

    on the drawing board for 802.11ac,

    and the most interesting of these is

    multi-user MIMO (MU-MIMO).

    MU-MIMO builds on the

    beamforming capabilities of 802.11n

    and enables the simultaneous

    transmission of different data frames

    to different clients. Correctly using

    MU-MIMO requires that vendors

    develop spatial awareness of

    clients and sophisticated queuing

    systems that can take advantage of

    opportunities to transmit to multiple

    clients when conditions are right.

    802.11ad has the same gigabit

    goal, but is intended for use with

    new spectrum around 60 GHz to

    use. Range will be shorter, but the

    spectrum is cleaner because many

    fewer devices use it today. The open

    spectral band is large enough that

    the current 802.11ad draft supports

    nearly 7 Gbps throughput.

    The higher data rates of

    802.11ac and 802.11ad will have

    far-reaching influences into other

    areas of the protocol. CCMP, theexisting encryption protocol first

    The higher datarates of 802.11acand 802.11ad

    will have far-reachinginfluences into other areasof the protocol.

    standardized in 802.11i, requires

    two AES encryption operations for

    every 16 bytes of data. To encrypt a

    1,500-byte frame requires roughly

    200 AES encryption operations. To

    make matters worse, CCMP is based

    on a chained mode of operation

    that requires in-order processing of

    the 16-byte chunks because chained

    cryptographic modes require the

    output of one stage to be used as the

    input to the next. Many engineers

    within the 802.11 working group

    expect that the high data rates of

    802.11ac and 802.11ad will be too

    high for CCMP.

    Fortunately, a solution is readily

    available in the form of the Galois/

    Counter Mode Protocol (GCMP),

    which has been incorporated into

    the 802.11ad draft. GCMP uses the

    same AES cryptographic engine,

    but embeds it into a more efficient

    framework. Compared with CCMP,

    GCMP requires only half the number

    of encryption operations, and, more

    importantly, is not chained so that

    GCMP cryptographic acceleration can

    be applied to an entire transmitted

    frame in parallel. The downside of

    the adoption of GCMP is that it is a

    new protocol and will only become

    available in new radio chips that

    support it, and an entire generation

    of centralized cryptographicequipment, such as the security

    processors in WLAN controllers, will

    become obsolete.

    As with every jump in speed that

    has occurred in Wi-Fi, 802.11ac and

    802.11ad present challenges for the

    network administrator. The move

    to gigabit Wi-Fi is needed to keep

    up with demand for Wi-Fi network

    capacity and enable Wi-Fi to remain

    the technology of choice at the edge.

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    34/48

    feue |VDI

    Cost-saving technologies remain a priority or IT in 2011 and virtual desktopinrastructure (VDI), with its ability to streamline operations, is one o the

    technologies at the top o the list.

    Best practices formaximising VDI success

    on network performance, understanding

    the difference between LAN, WAN and

    VPN activity is critical to project success.

    How VDI affects the network

    VDI pilots often stall when employees start

    accessing their desktops via WAN, VPN

    With VDI, IT administrators

    can managedesktops and

    applications from a centralized

    location, eliminating the need to physically

    touch and update every single desktop.

    This, in turn, enables faster provisioning

    and deployment - a framework that is

    especially attractive for rapidly expanding

    computing environments. End users also

    benefit, gaining the ability to seamlessly

    access critical applications from any

    location with a myriad of devices.

    So whats the catch? Why do VDI pilots

    fail? As the computing landscape has

    changed, so have user expectations. With

    mobile and ubiquitous computing fast

    becoming the norm for most corporations,

    end users dont tolerate availability or

    performance problems. In fact, end user

    satisfaction has been identified as the No.1

    factor in determining success of any VDI

    pilot/proof of concept (POC). If the plan

    includes thousands of desktops, ensuring

    the first hundred users happiness is criticalto satisfying the next hundred, and so on.

    The network is key to VDI satisfaction,

    being the conduit by which the virtual

    desktop continuously feeds the VDI

    client desktop activity. This video feed

    paints the monitors screen via a desktop

    presentation protocol, such as PCoIP, ICA

    or RDP. When the visual display depends

    www.newkwdme.m34 Newk Wd Mdde E March 2011

  • 8/6/2019 Network World Middle East - March 2011

    35/48March 2011Newk Wd Mdde E

    and other lower speed links. On the LAN,

    contention