The Fat Pipe - All of the Packet Pushers Podcasts show

The Fat Pipe - All of the Packet Pushers Podcasts

Summary: The Packet Pushers Podcast Network offers continuous professional development for IT professionals. Keep up with networking, security, cloud, career, and more. We bring the IT community together--engineers, architects, vendors, developers, educators, etc. In this feed, listen to every conversation we record!

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  • Artist: Greg Ferro, Ethan Banks, Drew Conry-Murray, Chris Wahl, Scott Lowe
  • Copyright: © 2021 Packet Pushers Interactive LLC

Podcasts:

 Datanauts 107: Found On The Internet Series 3 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

It’s back to the flea market of ideas that is the Web for the latest in the Datanauts’ ‘Found On The Internet’ series. Chris and Ethan sift through online baubles, notions, and curiosities to find just the right accent pieces to decorate the bridge of the Datanauts Starship. Our finds for Series 3 include container adoption, storage network topologies, PowerShell, IT blame culture, and so much more to delight and amaze! Show Links: Microsoft: Embrace Containers or Face Extinction – Container Journal Hope Versus Reality, One Year Later: An Update on Containers – CloudFoundry (PDF) Kubernetes The Hard Way – Kelsey Hightower via GitHub Kubernetes: Up and Running – O’Reilly Books Distributed Storage Network Topology – Niels Hagoort.com The Ascendancy Of Ethernet Storage Products – The Next Platform v6.0.0-beta.8 release of PowerShell Core – GitHub PowerShell – GitHub Visual Studio Code September 2017 (version 1.17) – Visual Studio Reminder – John Allspaw Blameless Postmortems and a Just Culture – Code as Craft Show 357: Beyond Name, Blame And Shame In IT – Packet Pushers How to handle abandoned projects, Take Two – Katie McLaughlin (YouTube) Summit: The PowerShell Community’s Global Meet-Up PowerShell + DevOps Global Summit 2018 – EventBrite STARWest: Make Your Team Awesome, Yes You Can! Serverless Conference 2017 Interviews – The Cube

 PQ 132: YANG All The Things – IETF 99 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Our series of podcasts recorded live at IETF 99 continues with a conversation about network automation and the YANG data modeling language. Our guest is Sue Hares, a consultant and chair of the Inter-Domain Routing Working Group at the IETF. Sue also joined us for Weekly Show 355: What’s Wrong With BGP? We talk about the costs of network configuration, in particular the software interfaces and hand-crafted, artisinal command lines that define the majority of how network devices are set up and operated. We also dive into why network automation is getting more attention, and how YANG fits into the picture. And Sue makes a pitch for listeners to participate in IETF hackathons for learning, professional development, and as a way to get involved with the standards organization. For more conversations about YANG and IETF hackathons, check out the Show Links below. Thanks to Huawei, which covered travel and accommodations to enable the Packet Pushers to attend IETF 99 and record some shows to spread the news about IETF projects and initiatives. Show Links: YANG Catalog PQ Show 116: Practical YANG For Network Automation – Packet Pushers PQ Show 111: YANG Models & Telemetry At IETF 98 – Packet Pushers PQ Show 114: Hackathons: Rough Consensus, Running Code At IETF 98 – Packet Pushers

 Datanauts 106: Controlling AWS Costs | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Tracking cloud costs seems like it should be pretty straightforward: you pay X cents per time unit per resource used. But as cloud customers quickly learn, costs can get complicated pretty quickly. It can be hard to predict costs month by month, you may get billing surprises, and organizations can spend more than they need to. Today on the Datanauts starship we’ve beamed aboard Corey Quinn, a cloud economist and consultant who helps customers understand their AWS bills and how to manage their spending. He’s the founder of Quinn Advisory Group, and also writes a free newsletter called Last Week In AWS. We start the conversation by drilling into how AWS bills for its services, and then talk about how costs and billing tie back to business decisions. You have to understand why you’re moving into the cloud, and how you’re factoring your applications, to really understand what you’ll be spending. We also explore reasons why bills grow unexpectedly, learn how to set alerts to catch overages, and discuss why the lowest bid for your cloud business shouldn’t be your primary decision point. While our conversation focuses mostly on AWS, it applies to any public cloud offering. Sponsor: ITProTV ITProTV brings you the most current IT training with over 2,000 hours of content and more than 125 hours added weekly. ITProTV is the resource to keep you and your IT team’s skills up to date. Visit itpro.tv/datanauts​ ​and use code DATANAUTS30​ ​to get a FREE 7-day trial and 30% off a monthly membership for the lifetime of your active subscription. Sponsor: LiveAction Join LiveAction and Ethan Banks for a live Webinar on Thursday, October 26th to learn how to reduce the complexity of SD-WAN technology adoption, provide service assurance governance with proactive insights, and deliver the promised performance enhancement for a better application experience. Register here today and mark your calendar to join us on October 26th at 2:00 pm Eastern. Show Links: Quinn Advisory Group Last Week In AWS Dealing with a nasty AWS Billing Surprise: Beware the defaults. – HackerNoon Ryan Hellyer’s AWS Nightmare: Leaked Access Keys Result in a $6,000 Bill Overnight – WP Tavern

 Full Stack Journey 014: Robert Kloosterhuis | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

The Full Stack Journey continues with guest Robert Kloosterhuis (a.k.a The Fluffy Admin), who joins Scott to discuss finding a balance between hands-on experience and broader knowledge. The post Full Stack Journey 014: Robert Kloosterhuis appeared first on Packet Pushers.

 PQ 131: Whitebox At LinkedIn – IETF 99 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

The Packet Pushers’ Priority Queue series from IETF 99 continues with a conversation about whitebox switching at LinkedIn. Shawn Zandi, principal infrastructure architect at LinkedIn; and Russ White, network architect at LinkedIn. Greg Ferro and his guests discuss the architectural changes going on at LinkedIn, including a move to adopt whitebox switches. They look at the drivers for whitebox adoption, including wanting to have more control over their infrastructure, the ability to rethink network design, the opportunity to get features they want (and remove ones they don’t), and potential cost savings. They also explore the challenges that come with whitebox deployment and operations, and talk about the pros and cons of various network designs. Thanks to Huawei, which covered travel and accommodations to enable the Packet Pushers to attend IETF 99 and record some shows to spread the news about IETF projects and initiatives.

 Datanauts 105: Cryptocurrencies And The Blockchain | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Today on the Datanauts, our infrastructure rocket navigates the rapidly expanding universe of cryptocurrencies–specifically Bitcoin and Ethereum–and the Blockchain distributed database. We also touch on the Grid+ project. All of these topics could get their own episode (or more) so this is more of an introductory show than a deep dive. But we’ve got three smart guests to help us make sense of it all: Mark D’Agostino, Managing Partner at ConsenSys Enterprise and Strategy Lead at Grid+; Karl Kreder, Director of Energy at ConsenSys; and Alex Miller, Software Engineer at ConsenSys and Software Lead at Grid+. Sponsor: Datadog This week’s show is sponsored by Datadog. Built by engineers, for engineers, Datadog is a SaaS-based monitoring platform for cloud-scale infrastructure and applications. Sign up for a free trial and get a free T-shirt at datadog.com/datanauts. Show Links: ConsenSys What is Blockchain Technology? A Step-by-Step Guide For Beginners – BlockGeeks What is Cryptocurrency: Everything You Need To Know – BlockGeeks SXSW Preview: What’s the Next Generation Internet? Surprise: It’s all about the Blockchain! – Don Tapscott via LinkedIn Grid+ FAQ – Grid+ Grid+ Blog – Grid+

 PQ 130: ANIMA And IoT Networking – IETF 99 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

The Priority Queue returns to the IETF 99 conference to explore projects and standards being worked on within the IETF. How do you get devices such as light bulbs and sensors join a network securely, make sure they’ve joined the right network, and that the network can be sure the device is what it claims? That’s the general thrust of today’s episode, which looks at the ANIMA (Autonomic Networking Integrated Model and Approach) Working Group. This working group aims to “…develop a system of autonomic functions that carry out the intentions of the network operator without the need for detailed low-level management of individual devices.” Greg’s guest is Michael Richardson, an IETF member and Managing Editor at the Centre for Research and Experimental Development in Informatics Libre (CREDIL) in Canada. In addition to ANIMA, Greg and Michael also discuss 6tisch and NETCONF. Thanks to Huawei, which covered travel and accommodations to enable the Packet Pushers to attend IETF 99 and record some shows to spread the news about IETF projects and initiatives.

 Datanauts 104: Migrating Exchange To Office 365 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Are you still hosting your own e-mail? Is it on Microsoft Exchange? Are you maybe a little sick of that? What if you could outsource some of those pesky infrastructure problems to the cloud? Well, of course, you can. Microsoft Office 365 would love to help you with that. Catch a ride on board the mail migration rocket on this episode of the Datanauts podcast. Our guest is Theresa Miller. She’s founder of 24×7 IT Connection. She’s a consultant and analyst, and she also blogs and hosts the Current Status podcast. Theresa and the Datanauts examine the business case for, and technology implications of, migrating from on-premises email to a cloud service. They also look at the migration process and its impact on users, and discuss the operational challenges of co-existence when IT is managing both the premises system and the cloud service. Sponsor: LiveAction Join LiveAction and Ethan Banks for a live Webinar on Thursday, October 26th to learn how to reduce the complexity of SD-WAN technology adoption, provide service assurance governance with proactive insights, and deliver the promised performance enhancement for a better application experience. Register here today and mark your calendar to join us on October 26th at 2:00 pm Eastern.

 PQ 129: Accelerating Change In Enterprise IT – Future:Net (Sponsored) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Can we accelerate the pace of change in enterprise IT? That’s the topic for today’s Priority Queue. This episode, sponsored by VMware, was recorded live at VMware’s Future:Net conference on August 31, 2017. Greg Ferro and Ethan Banks assemble a panel of networking experts and practitioners to discuss why technology change can be so difficult in the enterprise (product complexity, long buying cycles, process paralysis, and so on), and how organizations can spur change and innovation in their own environments. Our guests are: * Pere Monclus, CTO, VMware * Jeremy Filliben – Principal Network Architect, Genworth Financial * Tommy McNicholas – Solutions Architect at Technologent * Truman Boyes – CTO Office, Head of Networks at Bloomberg

 Datanauts 103: Azure Infrastructure And PowerShell At Microsoft Ignite | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Today on the Datanauts, Chris Wahl undertakes an away mission to the Microsoft Ignite conference in Orlando, FL. (Don’t worry, he’s not wearing a red shirt.) He’s beamed into Microsoft’s Podcast Center to record a live episode with Jeffrey Snover, Technical Fellow at Microsoft and Chief Architect for Azure Infrastructure and the creator of Powershell. Chris and Jeffrey delve into the latest developments in PowerShell and PowerShell Core, explore features and use cases for Azure Stack (which was just released to general availability), and review key announcements from Ignite for Azure, SQL Server 2017, and more. Ethan Banks pipes in remotely to offer his takeaways. Show Links: Monad Manifesto – Jeffrey Snover Datacenter transformation – a roadmap for platforms, processes, and people – Jeffrey Snover (Microsoft Ignite presentation) Azure Stack – Microsoft Configuring and Operating Microsoft Azure Stack – Microsoft Course

 PQ 128: ExtraHop 7.0 & Addy Machine Learning (Sponsored) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Packet capture and analysis tools are powerful things. Capturing real data lets you peer into the soul of your network. That power can be enhanced with machine learning. It’s everywhere these days, but if there’s one area where machine learning can be very useful, surely it’s packet analysis. That brings us to ExtraHop, the subject of today’s sponsored show. ExtraHop is a protocol decoder, packet analysis engine, threshold management system, alerting tool, flow record collector, and application health dashboard all in one. We’ve spoken with ExtraHop before, and today we’re returning with news of product updates and ExtraHop’s “Addy” machine learning. Our guests from ExtraHop are Isaac Roybal, Director of Product Marketing; and Matt Cauthorn, VP of Security. We discuss the release of ExtraHop 7.0 to understand what’s in the newest version (including Live Activity Maps and SSL/TLS decryption), and then drill into its Addy machine learning technology to see how it can be used to analyze reams of data to produce actionable insights.   Show Links: ExtraHop ExtraHop on Twitter ExtraHop Blog  

 Datanauts 102: Does Data Locality Matter? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

In distributed storage systems and hyperconverged environments, storage is scattered across a bunch of hosts all over the network. So does performance suffer if a workload’s data is across the network somewhere? Should workloads have local data to perform as well as they ought? In other words, does data locality matter? The Datanauts beam aboard storage expert Howard Marks to dive into the issue of data locality. Howard is a well known writer, speaker, consultant and Chief Scientist at DeepStorage. He’s also co-host of the Greybeards on Storage podcast. Howard and the Datanauts discuss the basics of data locality and storage networking; explore the myriad bottlenecks and latency sources that can affect an application’s interaction with a storage system; and delve into the issues around hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI), data locality, and replication and resiliency. Sponsor: Datadog This week’s show is sponsored by Datadog. Built by engineers, for engineers, Datadog is a SaaS-based monitoring platform for cloud-scale infrastructure and applications. Sign up for a free trial and get a free T-shirt at datadog.com/datanauts. Show Links: DeepStorage HCI And Data Locality – DeepStorage Evaluating Nutanix’ original & unique implementation of Data Locality – Josh Odgers Looking for the silver bullet that’s not there? My (and Datrium) response to the Data Locality debacle – Andre Leibovici

 PQ 127: Path Aware Networking Research Group – IETF 99 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Today’s Priority Queue returns to the IETF to explore the concept of path-aware networking. Currently, end points on a network have little control over or information about the path over which their traffic is carried. Efforts are under way, both by vendors and within standards bodies, to develop technologies and protocols to both provide more information about links (i.e. performance, trust, cost, and so on) and enable end points to select the most appropriate path to meet certain criteria. For example, SD-WAN gateways can connect to multiple links and then direct traffic across one or more of those links based on customer-defined policies. Greg Ferro and guests from the IETF’s Path Aware Networking Research Group discuss the concepts of path aware networking and examine the work being done by the group. Our guests are Brian Trammell, co-chair of the Path Aware Networking Research Group and a researcher at ETH Zurich; and Jen Linkova, also a co-chair of the research group and a network engineer at Google. Thanks to Huawei, which covered travel and accommodations to enable the Packet Pushers to attend IETF 99 and record some shows to spread the news about IETF projects and initiatives. Show Links: Path Aware Networking Research Group – IETF Standards – XKCD

 Datanauts 101: CIOs And The Business Side Of IT | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

In this episode the Datanauts bust the ultimate silo: the executive suite. We delve into the role of the CIO to understand the priorities and job functions of this position. We also want to learn how engineers, operators, and technologists can work with these and other executives to meet goals and align with business needs. Our guide into the mind of the CIO is Tim Crawford, a principal at strategic consulting firm AVOA. Tim is a former CIO, and he now advises CIOs and other executives on transforming their IT organizations. We talk with Tim about the role of the CIO and that person’s job function within an organization, and examine the differences between traditional and transformational CIOs. In essence, a CIO’s role, while focused on the business, is to understand how to take advantage of technology to drive the organization. Tim also shares his insights into what keeps CIOs up at night, and the appeal of the cloud for executives. And for those with an eye for the executive suite, he offers advice on the skillsets and knowledge required to move up the ladder. Show Links: The difference between the Traditional CIO and the Transformational CIO – Tim Crawford (AVOA) On Pioneers, Settlers, Town Planners and Theft – Bits or pieces?

 PQ 126: The Future Of Data Center Fabrics – IETF 99 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Recorded live at IETF 99, this Priority Queue episode is a roundtable conversation on new and emerging ideas for data center fabrics. Greg Ferro is joined by Jeff  Tantsura, a chair of the routing working group at IETF; Russ White, a network architect at LinkedIn; and Tony Przygienda, who works for a vendor and claims to be the only grownup in this conversation. (You be the judge!) They discuss why efforts such as TRILL and SPB failed to gain traction, and then dive into BGP EVPN, Routing In Fat Trees (RIFT), and other protocols. Thanks to Huawei, which covered travel and accommodations to enable the Packet Pushers to attend IETF 99 and record some shows to spread the news about IETF projects and initiatives. Show Links: RIFT: Routing In Fat Trees (PDF) – Juniper Networks Routing Area Working Group – IETF PQ Show 115: BIER, RIFT & BGP+SFC At IETF 98 – Packet Pushers

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