

You may share a URL to a blog that answers questions already in discussion. Directing our members to resources elsewhere is closely monitored.This sub prefers to share knowledge within the sub community.These posts will be deleted without mercy.These topics pollute our industry and devalue the hard work of others.Home Lab hardware discussions, as in "what do I buy for a homelab" are not permitted.Home Lab discussions, as a tool for learning & certifications are welcomed.Home Networks, even complex ones are best discussed elsewhere like /r/homenetworking.We aren't here to troubleshoot your "advanced" video game latency issues.Topics regarding senior-level networking career progression are permitted.This topic has been discussed at length, please use the search feature. Topics asking for information about getting into the networking field will be removed.Networking Career Topics are allowed with following guidelines: No Homework Topics without detailed, and specific questions.Enterprise /Data Center /SP /Business networking related.New Visitors are encouraged to read our wiki.Įnterprise & Business Networking topics such as:Įducational Topics & Questions are allowed with following guidelines: You can analyze remote hosts and services your users use the most of time. The built-in sniffer in the Agent can gather addresses your hosts are communicating with. The bandwidth monitoring can be performed over the SNMP protocol, WMI, and remote Agents installed on networked PCs. The application offers you a lot of possibilities of generating reports and viewing statistics on the traffic usage.

It can send SMS or e-mail, or even reboot a computer or restart a service. If the critical limits of utilized traffic volume are reached, the application will generate an alert and notify you about the event.

The application collects data on the inbound and outbound traffic utilized by your hosts and draws the bandwidth diagrams dynamically in the real time. 10-Strike Bandwidth Monitor allows you to monitor the network bandwidth and the traffic usage on network interfaces of various devices (Windows and Linux computers, managed switches, etc.).
