iTnews
  • Home
  • News
  • Technology
  • Security

Firewall signs Exinda

By Byron Connolly
Feb 17 2005 3:46PM
Follow google news

Distributor Firewall Systems has signed Exinda Networks, a manufacturer of a product used for network traffic monitoring and control.

Distributor Firewall Systems has signed Exinda Networks, a manufacturer of a product used for network traffic monitoring and control.


Its Optimiser appliance offering allows network administrators to allocate priority to critical network applications and isolate and fix things that are slowing the network down.

The product fits perfectly with Firewall’s managed security strategy, said Nick Verykios, marketing director at Firewall. “We’re rolling out managed services and we’ve brought on Exinda to complete the quality of service side of the security offering. If security is deployed, it can take up the entire network when it’s unmanaged,” he said.

“What this [product] does is give us the opportunity to manage the last component of it [managed security] which is the bandwidth side of it and therefore quality of service on the LAN.”

"How can you manage a network if you don’t know what’s happening on it?," he said.

Con Nikolouzakis, executive director at Exinda Networks, said customers are looking for business continuity and the product is all about the continuation of IT services from a “WAN and network perspective.”

Verykios said that Exinda has the backing of  “more engineers than you can poke a stick at”.

“What we need is a relationship with a global company that can give us engineering resources to keep working managed services.

“Right now, what they have is a quality of service product that goes a bit further than everything else that’s on the market particularly in the most important area and that’s the [network] reporting,” he said.

“It used to be if a network was under threat -- now it’s always under threat or the network traffic shuts down because so much bandwidth is taken up by the attacks.”

“So this [product] allows you to allocate all of the available bandwidth to the applications and not to that stuff so you can isolate it and work on it,” he said.

The Exinda appliance and OEM technology have been sold in 12 countries throughout North America, Europe and Asia.

Firewall would make two new vendor announcements over the next two months, Verykios said.

Add iTnews as your trusted source

Add iTnews As Your Trusted Source Add iTnews As Your Trusted Source
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Tags:
exindafirewallssecurity

Related Articles

  • Anthropic releases Mythos-class model for public use Anthropic releases Mythos-class model for public use
  • Apple bumps up security in fresh operating system releases Apple bumps up security in fresh operating system releases
  • Meta accuses NSO Group of violating court order by WhatsApp spear phishing Meta accuses NSO Group of violating court order by WhatsApp spear phishing
  • Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM
Join our WhatsApp Channel

Partner Content

Intelligence × Trust: the equation that will decide Australia's AI winners
Promoted Content Intelligence × Trust: the equation that will decide Australia's AI winners
From test case to control tower: How DXC and ServiceNow are governing enterprise AI at scale
Promoted Content From test case to control tower: How DXC and ServiceNow are governing enterprise AI at scale
The hidden economics of AI: Why token usage matters more than you think
Partner Content The hidden economics of AI: Why token usage matters more than you think
You meet the security standard. Shame no one can see it
Promoted Content You meet the security standard. Shame no one can see it

Sponsored Whitepapers

Agile in the AI Era: why projects still fail
Agile in the AI Era: why projects still fail
When Technology Becomes the Blocker: Unlocking Real Outcomes from AI and Cloud
When Technology Becomes the Blocker: Unlocking Real Outcomes from AI and Cloud
High-volume data sources for AI-driven security analytics
High-volume data sources for AI-driven security analytics
How healthcare organisations can get more value from cloud
How healthcare organisations can get more value from cloud
1 in 3 companies lose SaaS data. Here’s how to prevent it
1 in 3 companies lose SaaS data. Here’s how to prevent it

Events

  • iTnews State of Security Breakfast iTnews State of Security Breakfast
  • iTnews State of Data & AI Breakfast iTnews State of Data & AI Breakfast
  • The 2026 iAwards The 2026 iAwards
  • Integrate 2026 Integrate 2026
  • Security Exhibition & Conference Security Exhibition & Conference
Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Share on Whatsapp Email A Friend

Most Read Articles

Anthropic opens Claude Mythos Preview AI program to Australia

Anthropic opens Claude Mythos Preview AI program to Australia

Defence says Palantir is "sandboxed" in its environment

Defence says Palantir is "sandboxed" in its environment

Services Australia describes fraud, debt-related machine learning use cases

Services Australia describes fraud, debt-related machine learning use cases

Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM

Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM

techpartner.news logo
Sydney-based AI-cloud waste startup raises $3m
Sydney-based AI-cloud waste startup raises $3m
Brennan uses NiCE to modernise its contact centre
Brennan uses NiCE to modernise its contact centre
Impact Awards: Tecala slashes customer response times for fintech IQumulate
Impact Awards: Tecala slashes customer response times for fintech IQumulate
Interactive introduces private cloud platform
Interactive introduces private cloud platform
Digital61 expands cybersecurity portfolio
Digital61 expands cybersecurity portfolio
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any form without prior authorisation.
Your use of this website constitutes acceptance of nextmedia's Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.