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<feed xml:lang="en" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><title>Recent posts to news</title><link href="https://sourceforge.net/p/ciperf/news/" rel="alternate"/><link href="https://sourceforge.net/p/ciperf/news/feed.atom" rel="self"/><id>https://sourceforge.net/p/ciperf/news/</id><updated>2008-11-24T20:52:41Z</updated><subtitle>Recent posts to news</subtitle><entry><title>ciperf has come to living, version 1.1.1 is here</title><link href="https://sourceforge.net/p/ciperf/news/2008/11/ciperf-has-come-to-living-version-111-is-here/" rel="alternate"/><published>2008-11-24T20:52:41Z</published><updated>2008-11-24T20:52:41Z</updated><author><name>Simon  Egli</name><uri>https://sourceforge.net/u/deadolus/</uri></author><id>https://sourceforge.net9bacce812ab13a9cd3e1ab59fa515262f25a1ade</id><summary type="html">&lt;div class="markdown_content"&gt;&lt;p&gt;I created this project in hope is is useful to some other test engineers which use iperf as a packet throughput tester. It was created because of practical need for my work, and you may want to tailor it to your needs.&lt;br /&gt;
This is my first &amp;quot;real&amp;quot; (open source) project, so I'm still experimenting with a lot of things, but version 1.1.1 of ciperf is already in production within our company.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Regards, Deadolus&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary></entry></feed>