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Paperback Wan Survival Guide: Strategies for Vpns and Multiservice Networks Book

ISBN: 0471384283

ISBN13: 9780471384281

Wan Survival Guide: Strategies for Vpns and Multiservice Networks

Ensure that your WAN can handle the latest technologies with this must-have strategy guide If a Wide Area Network (WAN) isn't set up properly, it won't be able to meet the needs of the applications being used in the Local Area Network (LAN). And with the emergence of new technologies such as VPNs, multi-service networks, and the mobility of corporate users, the costs involved with running a WAN have changed dramatically. Written by an expert on WAN design, this book provides a comprehensive strategy for choosing the best technologies available for your WAN. It includes analysis of business requirements for WANs, end-user and service provider requirements, and the capabilities and tradeoffs of the available technologies. The book also covers the realities and limitations of QoS, security, multi-service networks, virtual networks, VPNs, multi-homing, roaming, and mobility.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

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We receive fewer than 1 copy every 6 months.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

full of wisdom and interesting analogies

Howard Berkowitz has a unique ability to share his wisdom and experience in a funny and memorable way so that the reader learns new information, but more importantly gains network design skills. This book is not YAWB (Yet Another WAN Book). As any WAN engineer can tell you, the most important challenges require a broader understanding. Designing a reliable WAN requires an understanding of fault-tolerance options, QoS, and security. This book covers those topics, along with load distribution, MPLS, NAT, tunneling, and "virtualization." The Layer-7 virtualization section provides useful tips for understanding Web caches, application-specific caches, proxies, and stateful packet screening."WAN Survival Guide" is part of the Networking Council Series from Wiley Computer Publishing and it meets the goals of that series well. The Networking Council, which includes luminaries such as Vint Cerf and Scott Bradner, produces books that offer real-world guidance for experienced network engineers. These books don't reiterate the technical details that you can get from RFCs, vendor white papers, or reference books. Instead they present new ways of thinking about options, so that an engineer can compare and contrast technologies using business practices that the author has found useful.I recommend this book, both because it is enjoyable to read, (especially the Schwarzenegger laws of networking), and because it is practical and unique.

Howard strikes again

LAN Administrators must feel, when they deal with WAN engineers, as though they've fallen into a Lewis Carroll adventure, where a word means whatever someone chooses it to at that particular moment. But for LANs to interconnect, they need a WAN. To conduct e-business, they need a WAN. For any business connection to the Internet, they need a WAN. This book is a guided tour through how WANs developed, how they work, and, most important to the LAN Administrator, how they can serve the needs of the LAN.WAN Survival Guide is not too big-it doesn't delve into the relative merits of AAL5 vs. AAL1 encapsulation, nor is it too small-every major access technology into, and service offered by, WANs for LANs is addressed. These topics could be a dry, academic exercise, but (as usual) Howard Berkowitz spices the material with "war stories" of actual WAN technology assignments (and why the customers didn't really want they just asked for) and the injection of humor as a means of remembering rules (such as Schwarzenegger's Laws of Networking). The material covered includes emerging technologies, such as MPLS and POS, areas I work in daily at Nortel Networks. They are sufficiently explained that someone seeking service from a WAN can decide if they want to consider those technologies, or if they would prefer to let others go first and wait until more of the bugs are ironed out. Networking books often contain some editorial miscues (I recall a 3-page errata list for one book which was still quite valuable, warts and all). This one is no exception. Most of the problems seem to cluster in Chapters 3 and 4, with an occasional punctuation error elsewhere. While annoying to the reader, they don't seriously diminish the value of the book for anyone who needs to connect to a WAN as more than a single-account, dial-up user. There's a lot of material covered in the 400+ pages, so don't expect to read it in a weekend. But if you want to begin to understand what's "inside the cloud" or what's beyond the Demarc, this is an excellent place to start.
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