HN715: Prescribing The Right Dose Of Automation For A Hospital Network
Heavy Networking - Een podcast door Packet Pushers - Vrijdagen
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At NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, patients are the priority. That focus on patient care extends to the hospital’s campus network, data center, wireless network, and SD-WAN. These networks are instrumental for delivering medical applications and connecting medical devices. On today’s Heavy Networking, we talk with network architects and engineers at NewYork-Presbyterian about their use of automation to operate mission-critical services. We talk about their automation goals, including reducing human error and accelerating the provisioning of new medical devices onto the network. We also talk about automation challenges, how vendors could better support automation instead of just focusing on tools, why automation requires both technical and cultural changes, and more. Topics discussed include: * The hospital’s automation journey and where they still want to go * How automation leads to network stability * Frustrations with vendor tools * Trying to break the CLI habit * How different segments of the network (campus wired, wireless, DC, etc.) are more or less automation-friendly * More This episode was recorded on-site at the AutoCon0 conference in November 2023. Episode Guests: Mark Turczan | Network Architect, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital LinkedIn Pradeep Reddy Godhala | Network Architect, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital LinkedIn Max Turpin | Senior Network Wireless Engineer, Columbia University Irving Medical Center LinkedIn Sponsor: InterOptic Fortune 500 companies choose InterOptic optical transceivers to minimize the risk of network failures and maximize IT savings. InterOptic’s transceivers are 100% guaranteed compatible with Cisco, Juniper, Extreme, Arista and others, and available at a fraction of the cost. Work with the optics experts at InterOptic! Go to interoptic.com/packet-pushers/ to find out more. Show Links: NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital 3 Takeaways From AutoCon0 – Packet Pushers Network Automation Forum