SonicWall is announcing at the RSA conference this week four next-generation firewalls designed with enough speed for deployment in data centers. SonicWall is announcing at the RSA conference this week four next-generation firewalls designed with enough speed for deployment in data centers.Initially the family of SuperMassive E10000 devices support a 16-core architecture that will grow to 96 cores as chip technology develops to enable 10Gbps anti-spyware, anti-malware protection, 30Gbps application control, SSL inspection and intrusion prevention, and 40Gbps stateful firewall protection.ANALYSIS: Is a next-generation firewall in your future?PRODUCT ROUNDUP: Hot products from RSA 2011 The four models are based on a single chassis that can be populated with up to eight cards to expand capacity, so customers can upgrade from one model to another. Also, eight of the chassis can be linked to expand throughput or to run in high-availability mode.The company says it built the SuperMassive gear with power economy in mind and claims that its Gbps/Watt ratio is the best among next-generation firewall gear. Prices for the devices will range roughly from about $70,000 to $350,000 but the actual prices haven’t been set yet. SonicWALL SuperMassive E10100 is scheduled to ship in Q2, and SuperMassive E10200, E10400 and E10800 are slated to ship in Q3.Read more about wide area network in Network World’s Wide Area Network section. Related content news Okta launches Cybersecurity Workforce Development Initiative New philanthropic and educational grants aim to advance inclusive pathways into cybersecurity and technology careers. By Michael Hill Oct 04, 2023 3 mins IT Skills Careers Security news New critical AI vulnerabilities in TorchServe put thousands of AI models at risk The vulnerabilities can completely compromise the AI infrastructure of the world’s biggest businesses, Oligo Security said. By Shweta Sharma Oct 04, 2023 4 mins Vulnerabilities news ChatGPT “not a reliable” tool for detecting vulnerabilities in developed code NCC Group report claims machine learning models show strong promise in detecting novel zero-day attacks. By Michael Hill Oct 04, 2023 3 mins DevSecOps Generative AI Vulnerabilities news Google Chrome zero-day jumps onto CISA's known vulnerability list A serious security flaw in Google Chrome, which was discovered under active exploitation in the wild, is a new addition to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency’s Known Exploited vulnerabilities catalog. By Jon Gold Oct 03, 2023 3 mins Zero-day vulnerability Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe