Enterprise Networking
Wide Area Network
WAN
To many network professionals and clients, the term WAN does not refer to the Internet but directly to the Enterprise WAN services such as legacy Frame-Relay, ATM or MPLS. The distinction is that enterprise WAN services were designed primarily to connect a given enterprise’s branch offices and Data Centers while the Internet provides connectivity to a huge range of resources with myriad owners. Clients normally wanted Tier1 access to their backend applications and servers and these traditional WAN designs were integrated with policy-based routing to manipulate traffic as and when needed to conform to business requirements. This was especially great to use when high- and low-cost links were used and traffic classification and link degradation could be used as per client- or business requirements as a cost saving mechanism.
Local Area Network
LAN
Local-area network (LAN) switches are at the core of all networks, providing high-speed connectivity, applications and communications systems. The modern networks not only need to efficiently and securely transmit bandwidth-intensive data, voice, video and wireless applications, they also need to provide for evolving traffic patterns, new services and optimized application performance.
To meet current and future network needs, all LAN switch designs must have integrated security, be easy to manage and incorporate additional features relating to user experience, flexibility, consistency and uptime.
WiFi
Wireless networks enable devices with wireless capabilities to utilize company resources without a physical connection (wired) to the network infrastructure. The wireless network is an extension of the wired network where users and devices connect to access points for network connectivity.
Bring your own Device (BYOD) enables all wireless clients to utilize a reliable, secure and easy onboarding wireless network with our wireless network solutions.