Scripps relies on Juniper SRX Series Firewalls to securely connect TV stations, tech hubs & more!
Enabling secure, prime-time-ready branch connectivity.
Scripps's Chief Network Architect, Paul Riccobene, and Senior Director of Infrastructure, Mark Luciano, share how Scripps relies on Juniper SRX Series Firewalls to securely connect its TV stations, tech hubs, data centers, office, and cloud connections.
You’ll learn
Why Scripps backtracked on the rollout of a new third-party SD-WAN solution to branches
How relying on Juniper SRX Series Firewalls led to performance improvements, a stable VPN, and lower costs
Who is this for?
Host
Guest speakers
Transcript
0:02 Scripps has been around for over a hundred years. We're one of the nation's largest
0:07 local TV broadcasters. And we had huge challenges with getting SD-WAN to work
0:14 through another company. We just couldn't get it to meet our needs. When you're in video and
0:19 audio distribution, it's so critical that there's no latency. That was a challenge.
0:25 We had a strong relationship with Juniper. Probably 99% of our stations are on Juniper SRX
0:32 550 firewalls right now. And we decided to move back to what we knew. That was a tried and true
0:39 platform, just going back to our SRX firewalls to create our IPsec tunnels between locations. You
0:46 can't build a house on a on a shoddy foundation. Right? That's cracked or leaning. And you know,
0:52 I look at the SRX as kind of our foundation. It's rock solid, we can build upon that.
0:58 Probably two of the biggest performance improvements we saw when we switched back
1:02 to doing the Juniper VPN tunnels were one, our hub operators were telling us they saw about a
1:07 20% increase in round-trip times for management of devices. And the second thing was that we actually
1:14 had a very, very stable VPN environment. Once we switched everything over to the Juniper solution,
1:20 we found out that we didn't need the MPLS anymore and we got the exact same
1:25 performance across the VPN tunnels on the Juniper as we did with the existing MPLS,
1:30 but at a much, much lower cost. It has just dramatically improved
1:34 since we've been using this. We've always known that it works. We just kind of had to
1:38 get back to knowing kind of that rock-solid foundation. It's just such an improvement.