Key IT Lessons Learned from 30 Years of the Evolving Enterprise WAN

While many look to new technologies to understand what the future holds, network engineers who have “been around the block” know that looking into the past can be far more valuable— “those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” Watch part one of a two part roundtable with industry experts. They'll discuss how the wide area network (WAN) has evolved over the years and the key IT lessons learned along the way.

Watch part 1 now

 
First Name*
Last Name*
Job Title*
Phone Number*
Country*
State*
Zip Code
Company/Organization Name*

By clicking Submit, I agree to the use of my personal information in accordance with Juniper's privacy policy. I understand and acknowledge that my information may be used for electronic marketing activities and other purposes, and may be transferred for processing outside my country of residence, where standards of data protection may be different.

Please check the box below if Juniper Networks, Inc. may email and call you with information regarding our products and services, as well as event invitations or other tailored information. You can withdraw your consent at any time, by using the opt-out link at the bottom of our marketing emails. For more information on how Juniper Networks, Inc. uses your information please see our privacy policy.

I agree to receive communications from Juniper Networks, Inc. via email and phone call.


captcha is invalid

Key discussion points will include:

  • How has the speed of WAN links increased over the years? What’s the impact the speed increase has had on quality of service, on queueing, and on traffic engineering?
  • How has the physical connectivity changed? Has it become simpler? Or more complex?
  • How has thinking around things like cable routing, circuits grooming, deep buffers, and single points of failure changed over the years?

Moderator: Russ White, Co-Host, The History of Networking Podcast
Panelists:
Jeff Tantsura, Head of Networking Strategy, Apstra
Brooks Westbrook, Chief Architect, Juniper Networks
Nick Buraglio, Principal Network and Security Architect, ForwardingPlane, LLC