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We
offer solutions
to help Enterprises that today depend on a wide variety of applications
to make their organizations function effectively. Any effective
solution for application acceleration must provide significant
acceleration for all key applications that cross the WAN.
Many enterprises believe that the key to application acceleration is
WAN optimization. But optimizing the network - via compression, QoS, or
TCP optimization - is only one part of the solution needed to truly
improve application performance across the network.
Unlike other approaches to application acceleration, Fadetel
partner’s Riverbed wide-area data services (WDS) solutions
can
provide dramatic application performance increases - typically by five
to 50 times and in some cases up to 100 times faster - across the broad
range of applications that enterprises care about the most.
Even SSL-encrypted (e.g. HTTPS) traffic can take advantage of
Riverbed's award-winning acceleration techniques. These dramatic
performance increases enable customers to dramatically change the way
they do business: Inter-office collaboration becomes easier;
broad-based IT consolidation becomes a reality; network-based backups
become feasible; data can be more easily secured through centralization.
Most WAN optimization approaches look at the performance problem from
just one angle - the network. But the network is only one of the
factors slowing application performance. Because of the limited
approach taken by many WAN optimization vendors, enterprises that
deploy these products typically see just 10 to 20 percent improvement
in application performance, and similarly small gains in bandwidth
utilization. In the case of QoS-only products, enterprises see no
acceleration overall, they merely make trade-offs between reserving
bandwidth for one application at the expense of another.
To make the application performance leap that enterprises need, a
radically different approach must be taken: Simultaneously address
bandwidth constraints, TCP's behavior in high latency networks, and
inefficiencies in the applications themselves.
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