Sunday, September 09, 2007

Tarari to Speak at the Linley Group's "Embedded Network Security Design" Seminar

Tarari Inc., the award-winning hardware acceleration company, today announced that its CTO and co-founder, Jeff Carmichael has been invited to present during The Linley Group's Security Seminar "Embedded Network Security Design" on September 21, 2006, at the DoubleTree Hotel in San Jose, California. Tarari will present case studies on how to accelerate industry leading security applications such as Anti-Virus from Kaspersky Lab, Anti-Spam from Mail-Filters.com Inc., and Intrusion Prevention (IPS) from Intoto Inc., with Tarari's multi-core Content Processing ASICs. Tarari's "Content Processor" products are ASICs, production boards, and embedded software components that are designed to snap into networking, appliance, blades, and server systems.

Developers can immediately start building their designs using Tarari's silicon since Tarari supports a standard API across all of its software and silicon products. Tarari's Development kits enable customers to immediately develop cost-effective, leading-edge systems with enhanced functionality, proven interoperability and improved time-to-market.

Together Tarari Content Processors provide a scalable and comprehensive content inspection solution with a common application programming interface (API) all the way from 10 Megabits per Second (Mbps) to 10 Gigabits per second (Gbps.)

Tarari's family of T9000 Content Processor ASICs features the ability to concurrently support virus, intrusion, spam and compliance signatures -- while sustaining high line rates and are ideally suited for applications such as Unified Threat Management (UTM) appliances, content-based routing (CBR) and switching, application firewalls and security gateways, web acceleration, application networking, content filtering, anti-virus, regulatory compliance, database interfaces, and digital media.

The Linley Group's Security Seminar is the only dedicated security event for networking OEMs to help system developers who are designing security into routers and other networking equipment. The seminar is targeted at system designers, OEMs, network-equipment vendors, service providers, security vendors, media and the financial community.