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Security Tool Targets Small Networks
Network Associates ships Netasyst Network Analyzer.
Network Associates has announced network and security management software aimed at small and midsize users that tops out in price at about half of what the company's enterprise-class products cost.
The new Netasyst Network Analyzer software is intended for management of 10/100 ethernet installations and 802.11 wireless networks at companies with up to 500 end users, says Chris Thompson, vice president of product marketing at Network Associates in Santa Clara, California.
Pricing for the Netasyst software ranges from $1395 to $6590.
Early Interest
The new product can help users automate network and application problem resolution, and it will also provide IT managers with packet-level data about network performance and the functioning of firewalls, intrusion-detection and -protection systems, and other security technologies, Thompson says.
Austin Bank began testing Netasyst early this month on a network that supports operations at 19 branch offices, says Jeff Sowell, a network engineer at the Jacksonville, Texas-based bank. The bank has already used the tool to monitor slow response times on a Microsoft SQL Server database application and to track an apparent network intruder, which turned out to be a telephone technician who was using the network for maintenance purposes without first notifying anybody at the bank.
Sowell looked at several network management products but liked the idea of using a tool from a well-known vendor. In addition, Netasyst turned out to be easy to use.
"The expert network analysis is handy for somebody like me that doesn't do this everyday," Sowell says. "It makes any idiot pretty good at analyzing traffic."
Although Sowell is urging his managers to buy the software, that has not yet happened.
New Angle
Network Associates is primarily known as a vendor of security software for large companies, says Stephen Elliot, an analyst at IDC. But the network management market for smaller businesses is fragmented and not well served by management tools vendors such as IBM's Tivoli Software unit, Computer Associates International, and Hewlett-Packard, Elliot adds.
The closest competitors to Netasyst will be products from Ipswitch, WildPackets, and Network Instruments, Elliot adds.
Netasyst relies on underlying technology that's used in Network Associates' enterprise-class Sniffer product line, Thompson says. But the new offering will be sold as software, whereas most of the Sniffer products are appliances that include both software and dedicated hardware.
Also, the company's entry-level Sniffer Portable device carries a price tag of $12,000.
Another distinction between the two product lines is that Netasyst won't work on gigabit ethernet networks or over WANs, Thompson says.

For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright © 2011 Computerworld Inc. All rights reserved.
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