Meeting Community Needs With the USNUA
The key to business is simple: See a need, create […]
The key to business is simple: See a need, create […]
This week has been a big one for messaging privacy. The news broke on Monday that the Editor-in-Chief for The Atlantic magazine was accidentally added to a Signal group where members of the US government were talking about highly classified military actions. The report kicked off a firestorm of Congressional hearings about the nature of data sharing and privacy for not only government officials but members of the defense and intelligence community. This has also raised questions about the way that those same officials will often circumvent policy to facilitate communications. While the nature of the group and their discussion topic is highly political in nature let’s focus on the communications aspect. Why did they use Signal? How can we be sure it’s safe? And what does this mean for government agencies that still want to create backdoors into secure protocols? This and more on the Tech Field Day News Rundown.
Networking Field Day is back! One of most popular events is bringing you the latest edition with a great lineup of companies to discuss the latest in technology when it comes to moving bits back and forth. The topics will be diverse and we hope that you’re ready to strap in for the ride.
We’ve spoken at length about the CHIPS Act for the […]
Cisco has officially launched Meraki Access Manager, a cloud-native zero-trust service designed to simplify network authentication and security management. Presented at Tech Field Day Extra at Cisco Live EMEA 2025 by Alex Burger, Principal Engineer, and Stephen Orr, Distinguished Engineer, the new solution addresses complexities and management headaches associated with traditional RADIUS-based authentication and enhances security without the need for self-hosted infrastructure.
I want to take you back to the halcyon days of just a few weeks ago when we discussed the ways that NVIDIA AI chips were showing up in China even though they were under US embargo not to be able to get this advanced technology. This came as a result of a last minute policy decision from the outgoing Biden administration that blocked the Chinese from buying these chips. Now, companies like Microsoft are urging the new presidential administration to rescind the ban to give them access to the growing AI market in China. Chinese authorities are firing back at the ban by tellling their researchers to avoid visiting the US. And third parties are making a fortune reshipping shipments of restricted items to China from places like Singapore, where police just arrested three men charged with running an operation of that nature. This and more on the Rundown.
We’ve talked about quantum computing before but Microsoft created a quantum quake in the tech space last week. They announced a new quantum computer chip that took seventeen years to make. The Majorana-1 uses a brand new Topological Core technology that reduces error rates significantly and could create chips with as much as one million qubits of processing power per unit. Microsoft’s researchers reportedly created a new state of matter in the accompanying research paper published to Nature to help them create the method for increasing the power of the chip. This and more on The Rundown.
A report this week claims that Broadcom is investigating Intel’s chip design business and is contemplating an acquisition. The news comes from the Wall Street Journal and says that while Broadcom is interested in chip design they are not interested in the foundry business. Analysts are intriguied because that means that Broadcom could either use Intel’s designs to augment their existing lineup or perhaps package the businesses for sale to other partners or even competitors. This and more on The Rundown.
The amount of data that has been unearthed in the network over the past few years is astounding. We now have access to more information that we could ever hope to want about the status of packets transiting through the enterprise. But is this data causing networks to be more complex? In this episode of the Tech Field Day podcast, Tom Hollingsworth is joined by Pieter-Jan Nefkens, Matyas Prokop, and Dominik Pickhardt as they explore the rise in data-centric network design. They discuss the drivers behind the need for more focused deployments and how access to this amount of data is creating challenges for operations teams. They also look at how security plays a role in the amount of information gathered and what happens to it after it is collected.
We may only be a few weeks into 2025 but we’re ready to bring you more great Tech Field Day content! We will once more be broadcasting live from Amsterdam as we kick off Tech Field Day Extra at Cisco Live EMEA 2025. There are lots of exciting technology announcements that you’re not going to want to miss.