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Blue Coat Identifies Top 5 BYOD Traffic Disruptors for Enterprise Networks


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Blue Coat Systems
Blue Coat Systems
2013-01-13 07:01:12 - OS updates and App downloads expected to top the list of top internet bandwidth disruptors for enterprises

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, 12th January, 2013: Blue Coat has identified its Top 5 bring your own device (BYOD) traffic disruptors – activities and content sites that take up valuable WAN and internet bandwidth and disrupt the performance of mission-critical enterprise applications. On uncontrolled enterprise networks, Blue Coat estimates that 30 to 60 percent of bandwidth is consumed by the use of applications on personal BYOD smartphones and tablets.

1. BYOD device OS updates and upgrades
Apple continually provides updates and upgrades for iPhones and iPads to address bugs and introduce new functionality. Carriers force smartphone and tablet vendors to prioritize OS downloads to connected devices (devices connected to a computer or Wi-Fi network) for network connectivity. This means business’

Wi-Fi networks must handle OS updates and upgrades that are up to hundreds of megabytes in size. The result: a single BYOD device can easily overwhelm network bandwidth with one click – and corporate networks and applications will be the losers.

2. App downloads
Part of the success of mobile devices has been the availability of hundreds of thousands of applications that are readily accessible from online stores (Apple iTunes and Google Play). Given that the paid apps are priced to sell ($0.99 to $9.99) and some free apps are extremely powerful (Salesforce.com’s CRM, for example) or fun (Angry Birds), the typical BYOD owner downloads over 40 applications. Apps can range in size from a few megabytes to hundreds of megabytes, and app updates are image files. In a year, BYOD owners can easily pull multiple gigabytes for apps over a business Wi-Fi connection.

3. Photo and video uploads and downloads
One important reason for the popularity of smartphones and tablets is that their built-in cameras can capture still photos and video. Most BYOD devices come with high-resolution cameras. Anyone can capture a photo (1-3MB) or video (25 MB; 230MB for a minute) and quickly upload it to a sharing site like iCloud or Flickr for co-workers, friends and family to see. The same photos and videos can be just as easily downloaded for co-workers in the same office.

4. BYOD backup to cloud storage or a company-issued laptop or desktop
Many users have experienced data loss in some fashion and are therefore careful to back up their BYOD devices to either cloud storage (iCloud or Google Drive) or to their company-issued laptop or desktop (using iTunes). Given that the typical BYOD device has at least 8GB of on-board flash memory (some go up to 64GB), any backup is going to be several gigabytes in size; delta backups will be in the hundreds of megabytes. Backups to a cloud service will happen any time the BYOD device has a strong Wi-Fi (company wireless!) connection – not at the end of the day when network traffic is lower.

5. Watching recreational video on YouTube
With over a trillion views in 2011 and 72 hours of video uploaded every minute, Google’s YouTube is the behemoth of online video content. Localized in 46 countries across 60 languages, it is global in reach, impacting networks from the U.S. to the Middle East to Germany – every region of the world. Typical video from YouTube, at 640x360 resolution, will consume 500Kbps of bandwidth. So a single user in a remote office with a T1 connection will consume 33 percent of the bandwidth for as long as the video lasts – which, for a movie, could be hours.

About Blue Coat Systems
Blue Coat Systems provides Web security and WAN optimization solutions to 86 percent of FORTUNE Global 500 companies. As the market share leader in the secure web gateway market, Blue Coat sets the standard for enterprise security. Its solutions provide the visibility, protection and control required to optimize and secure the flow of information to any user, on any network, anywhere. For additional information, please visit www.bluecoat.com.

Blue Coat and the Blue Coat logo are registered trademarks or trademarks of Blue Coat Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the United States and certain other countries. All other trademarks mentioned in this document are the property of their respective owners.

For more information, please contact:

Manal Abi Rafeh
Blue Coat Systems ME
Telephone: +971 4  3911620
Fax: +971 4 3911635
Email: manal.abirafeh@Blue Coat.com

Media Contact:
Colin Saldanha
PR Consultant
PROCRE8
Dubai - UAE
GSM: +971 (50) 6400762
Email: colin@procre8.biz


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Author:
Colin Saldanha
e-mail
Web: www.procre8.biz
Phone: 00971506400762

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