Cameron Sturdevant

About

Cameron Sturdevant is the executive editor of Enterprise Networking Planet. Prior to ENP, Cameron was technical analyst at PCWeek Labs, starting in 1997. Cameron finished up as the eWEEK Labs Technical Director in 2012. Before his extensive labs tenure Cameron paid his IT dues working in technical support and sales engineering at a software publishing firm . Cameron also spent two years with a database development firm, integrating applications with mainframe legacy programs. Cameron's areas of expertise include virtual and physical IT infrastructure, cloud computing, enterprise networking and mobility. In addition to reviews, Cameron has covered monolithic enterprise management systems throughout their lifecycles, providing the eWEEK reader with all-important history and context. Cameron takes special care in cultivating his IT manager contacts, to ensure that his analysis is grounded in real-world concern. Follow Cameron on Twitter at csturdevant, or reach him by email at [email protected].

Cisco 6500 Goes Virtual

Cisco 6500 Goes Virtual This screen shows two stand-alone Catalyst 6500 switches equipped with the Virtual Switching Supervisor 720-10G blade, both running HSRP (Hot Standby Router Protocol) and ready to be converted into a single virtual switch with Cisco’s Virtual Switching System 1440. Both switches must have the latest supervisor blade. Cisco 6500 Goes Virtual […]

eWEEK Labs Walk-Through: Brocade DCX Datacenter Backbone

eWEEK Labs Walk-Through: Brocade DCX Datacenter Backbone The DCX chassis is a 16U (28-inch) box with a maximum of 448 ports. Two chassis can be used in tandem, increasing the maximum number of ports to 896. eWEEK Labs Walk-Through: Brocade DCX Datacenter Backbone – Ingress Rate Limiting Link 3 Port 2 with ingress rate limiting […]

My New iPhone, My Disappearing Privacy

My loss of privacy all started at a company-sponsored health and wellness fair in October. I got my blood pressure tested and my flu vaccine and I entered a drawing for an iPod Shuffle being given away by AC Transit. I occasionally take the transbay bus to work at the Ziff Davis Enterprise office at […]

PC Lockdown in the Government and Beyond

Organizations that already have a stable, secure image for desktop and laptop computers can ignore this story. Everyone else can now implement the Federal Desktop Core Configuration for Windows XP and Vista, which provides a good framework for ensuring secure civilian desktop and laptop configurations. In particular, IT managers at small and midsize organizations can […]

A Uniform Desktop Is a Secure Desktop

A Uniform Desktop Is a Secure Desktop NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technololgy) provides a baseline reference image for the FDCC at its Web site, fdcc.nist.gov. A Uniform Desktop Is a Secure Desktop – Password Policy The FDCC requires passwords to change every 60 days and have a minimum length of 12 characters, among […]

The Rise of the Appliance?

I’ve just returned from Madison, Wisc., where I worked with the good folks at WiscNet, the state research and education network provider, to conduct a look at three DNS (Domain Name System) appliances. WiscNet is considering appliances to replace its aging DNS implementation. At one point in the post-event wrapup, one attendee–a representative of a […]

eWEEK Labs Walk-Through: MySQL Enterprise Monitor

eWEEK Labs Walk-Through: MySQL Enterprise Monitor The Enterprise Monitor Dashboard provides a quick overview of monitored servers and their basic state of affairs (see far right, in the Heat Chart), as well as graphs that show trend information. eWEEK Labs Walk-Through: MySQL Enterprise Monitor – Enterprise Monitor Advisors Enterprise Monitor Advisors, shown in a list […]

Enterprise Monitor Eases Management of MySQL Installations

With the latest release of MySQL Enterprise Monitor, database administrators get advanced replication and database monitoring, as well as easier installation, to help manage both commercial and no-cost MySQL open-source database installations. Enterprise Monitor Fall 2007 is available with Silver, Gold and Platinum service plans. I tested the Platinum version, which has the most features […]

VOIP Calls STILL Need Strong Privacy Protection

Responding to my Dec. 28, 2007 blog “VOIP Calls Need Strong Privacy Protection,” reader JP said I was wrong. First, JP said, if an employee wants to make a personal call from the office that person should use his or her cell phone. Second, JP noted that business phones are for business use and no […]

VOIP Calls Need Strong Privacy Protection

Just before Christmas I had a chance to catch up with Network Instruments on Dec. 12. Our subject was the GigaStor network analysis family of tools. I’ve been impressed with the quality of Network Instruments tools and network analytics for some time. But today, as I look over my notes, I’m struck by the erosion […]