CEO Seth Noble discusses The Myth of Network Speed in Network Computing.
Read more of Seth Noble's predictions as Experts Reveal Predictions for Cloud Services in 2018 in eWeek.
Seth Noble in VMblog: "Key areas where I think we will see meaningful change in 2018 are: data transport to the cloud, data storage, and application deployment...experience and more sophisticated product offerings will improve stability and value for everyone."
Broadcast Tech reports on The Farm Group's facility upgrades and their selection of SyncDat for high speed media transfer.
IBC Field Report examines how M2Film found a faster way to move large files with ExpeDat.
Kedar Mohite from Ovum writes, CloudDat streamlines the media acquisition workflow and lowers TCO for digital-first enterprises.
Tolly recently spoke with Dr. Seth Noble, Founder and CEO at Data Expedition regarding their CloudDat product announcement, which is a high-performance software for data transport to and from the cloud designed to meet 21st-century networking demands.
From Enterprise Tech by Doug Black
In network technology circles there's a joke about "never underestimating the bandwidth capacity of a station wagon full of tapes driving down the highway." In the same vein, at re:Invent last fall, Amazon Web Services announced with fanfare - and some humor - a service for transferring up to 100PB of data to AWS in a 45-foot long shipping container pulled by an 18-wheeler truck.
From Silicon Angle by Paul Gillin
A self-described "quiet software company" that has taken no funding while building a base of more than 200 enterprise customers over the course of 17 years is hoping to make some noise today with the launch of a version of its high-performance data transport software for the major cloud infrastructure platforms.
From Packet Pushers by Ethan Banks
Data Expedition makes MTP/IP. If you're a network engineer used to seeing TCP/IP or UDP/IP, then MTP/IP would catch your attention. MTP stands for "multipurpose transaction protocol." MTP was built to overcome the algorithmic challenges TCP has filling pipes.