Doodling on a Napkin
Two more books you must read during your summer vacation: The Back of the Napkin and Unfolding the Napkin ... and here are a few drawing tools that work for me.
If you’re anything like me, your first results will be disastrous. Keep practicing; I’m able to draw understandable (if not pretty) diagrams by now (and I’m still trying to stay away from Pictionary).
Smart Fabrics Versus Overlay Virtual Networks
With the recent plethora of overlay networking startups and Cisco Live Dynamic Fabric Architecture announcements it’s time to revisit a blog post I wrote a bit more than a year ago, comparing virtual networks and voice technologies.
They say a picture is worth a thousand words – here are a few slides from my Interop 2013 Overlay Virtual Networking Explained presentation.
ProgrammableFlow Typical Use Cases
The last part of the ProgrammableFlow webinar described typical use cases including Cloud-as-an-Appliance, traffic steering (used by appliances like Radware DefenseFlow) and hypervisor switching with PF1000. Predictably, the use cases were followed by a lengthy Q&A session.
… updated on Thursday, April 23, 2020 05:30 UTC
The Tools That I Use (Drawings)
Continuing from the previous Tools That I Use post, here’s what I’m using to generate the hand drawings in blog posts and case studies.
Wacom Cintiq with SketchBook Pro has been indispensable for high-resolution drawings I used in case studies. I’ve tried to import router symbols in SketchBook Pro and make them look like they would be hand-drawn, but my illustrating skills are almost non-existent.

Typical SketchBook Pro drawing
Cloudbursting, the Wally Way
Priceless! (source: Dilbert.com)
… updated on Thursday, November 19, 2020 12:17 UTC
iSCSI with PFC?
Nicolas Vermandé sent me a really interesting question: “I've been looking for answers to a simple question that even different people at Cisco don't seem to agree on: Is it a good idea to class IP traffic (iSCSI or NFS over TCP) in pause no-drop class? What is the impact of having both pauses and TCP sliding windows at the same time?”
IPv6 Address Assignment and Tracking
One of the significant challenges of IPv6 is the host address assignment and tracking (for logging/auditing reasons), more so if you use SLAAC or (even worse) SLAAC privacy extensions. Not surprisingly, Eric Vyncke and I spent significant time addressing this topic in the IPv6 Security webinar.
Published on , commented on July 9, 2022
Fallacies of GUI
I love Greg Ferro’s characterization of CLI:
We need to realise that the CLI is a “power tools” for specialist tradespeople and not a “knife and fork” for everyday use.
However, you do know that most devices’ GUI offers nothing more than what CLI does, don’t you? Where’s the catch?
Summer seems to have arrived
The current weather around Central Europe doesn’t exactly support this conclusion, but I do get many more “I’m on vacation” responses than usual, so it’s time to reduce the blogging frequency to keep your RSS reader from overloading (you did switch from Google Reader to something like Feedly, didn’t you?).
However, if you’re looking for some really heavy reading, do pick up The Hidden Reality and explore various multiverse proposals. There’s also a beach-friendly version of multiverse discussion: The Long Earth by the one-and-only Terry Pratchett.
Data Center Fabrics Built with Plexxi Switches
During the recent Data Center Fabrics Update webinar Dan Backman from Plexxi explained how their innovative use of CWDM technology and controller-assisted forwarding simplifies deployment and growth of reasonably-sized data center fabrics.
I would highly recommend that you watch the video – the start is a bit short on details, but he does cover all the juicy aspects later on.
