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This Month in Networking - APR 2026
Sruthik I · 2026-05-04 · via DEV Community

AI Fabrics, Quantum-Safe Tunnels, and Cloud Policy

April was a good reminder that networking is not standing still.

The big themes were not abstract. They showed up in very practical places:

  • data centers trying to keep up with AI workloads
  • cloud networks becoming more private and policy-driven
  • routing security getting more attention
  • VPNs and firewalls preparing for post-quantum cryptography
  • wireless and edge access becoming business-critical
  • operations tools moving closer to automation and AI-assisted troubleshooting

If you are new to networking, read this as a map of where the field is going.

If you already work in the space, the useful question is: which of these shifts will hit your environment first?

What Moved This Month

Three things stood out.

First, AI is putting real pressure on physical network design. Cisco wrote about direct-liquid-cooled switching for AI-era data centers, scaling networks for AI without forklift upgrades, and AI-heavy media fabrics with NVIDIA. Network World also looked at NVIDIA's AI strategy, while Light Reading tracked how AI is pushing telecom costs.

Second, trust moved deeper into the network. Cloudflare made post-quantum IPsec generally available. Cisco published a quantum-safe architecture and a secure firewall roadmap.

Third, cloud networking kept moving away from "just connect things" and toward explicit policy. AWS added Client VPN attachment to Transit Gateway, showed centralized ingress inspection in Cloud WAN, and Microsoft pushed Azure toward private subnets by default.

That is the shape of April: more traffic, more private paths, more automation, and more security decisions happening inside the network.

1. AI Is Now A Network Design Problem

AI workloads are not only about GPUs.

Those GPUs need to talk to each other very fast. That means switches, optics, cables, cooling, telemetry, and clean failure domains all matter.

The useful AI networking signal this month was very physical:

There was also a more grounded operator angle from ipSpace. Ivan Pepelnjak wrote about generating partial device configurations with netlab, using a multi-vendor leaf-spine lab as the example.

That matters because AI-ready networks still need boring discipline:

  • repeatable topology builds
  • correct address plans
  • predictable BGP behavior
  • configuration templates that do not create surprise
  • labs that match the real design closely enough to catch mistakes

The takeaway: AI readiness is not a product label. It is a combination of capacity, cooling, observability, and operational repeatability.

2. The Internet Core Is Still Worth Watching

The Internet is held together by routing systems, registries, DNS, and a lot of operational trust.

BGP is the routing protocol that lets networks tell each other, "I can reach this prefix." When that trust is weak, bad routes, leaks, outages, and hijacks become easier.

April had several useful updates here:

  • APNIC covered ReAct, a mitigation approach for reflection DDoS attacks. The important detail is that it considers asymmetric routing, where traffic going out and traffic coming back may not use the same path.
  • APNIC also highlighted Pacific routing security, with PITA 31 set as a deadline for practical implementation.
  • APNIC noted that Google hit 50% IPv6. That does not mean IPv4 is gone, but it does mean IPv6 is no longer a side topic.
  • RIPE Labs introduced the reg-nr: attribute in the RIPE Database, making resource holders easier to identify.
  • RIPE Labs also wrote about real-time routing analysis using RIS Live and BGPlay APIs.
  • ipSpace shipped netlab 26.04, with EXOS support, BGP prefix origination improvements, and better static route support.

None of this is flashy. It is more important than flashy.

Internet resilience improves through small, repeated upgrades: better routing visibility, better registry data, better lab tooling, and more operators treating IPv6 and RPKI as normal work.

3. Cloud Networking Is Becoming More Intentional

A VPC or VNet is like your private network inside a cloud provider. The hard part is not creating it. The hard part is deciding who can reach what, through which path, and under whose policy.

April's cloud networking updates were all about that.

AWS had three strong signals:

Microsoft's Azure posts pointed in the same direction:

The direction is clear: cloud networking is becoming policy work.

The best cloud network designs will not just have neat diagrams. They will have clear ownership, explicit egress, auditable DNS, controlled inspection points, and troubleshooting data close to the workload.

4. Security Is Moving Into The Network Plane

April's security stories were really networking stories.

The biggest one was Cloudflare's post-quantum IPsec GA. IPsec is widely used for site-to-site VPNs. Post-quantum support matters because long-lived encrypted traffic may need protection against future cryptographic attacks.

The practical detail: Cloudflare is using hybrid ML-KEM and says it tested interoperability with Cisco and Fortinet. That makes the story more useful than a pure research announcement.

Cisco pushed the same theme from the platform side:

There was also movement around secure access and AI governance:

Simple version: security tools are being judged more by where they enforce policy, what network context they understand, and how well they fit into operations.

5. Network Operations Is Becoming Software Work

Automation is not new in networking.

What is changing is where automation is being applied.

This month was less about "generate a config" and more about "help me understand what broke."

Examples:

The caution came from ipSpace's "State of Network Automation with Urs Baumann". The uncomfortable point: many automation lessons from ten years ago still apply.

That is a good warning.

AI-assisted operations will help only if the basics are clean:

  • reliable inventory
  • accurate topology data
  • clear source of truth
  • tested templates
  • change control that people actually follow
  • telemetry that explains state, not just noise

Bad data plus automation just creates faster confusion.

6. Wireless And Edge Are Now Strategic

Wireless is not just "Wi-Fi in the office" anymore.

It carries retail systems, mobile devices, IoT, guest access, warehouse operations, cameras, collaboration tools, and sometimes backup connectivity for entire sites.

April's useful signals:

The pattern: access networks are becoming hybrid by default.

Fiber where possible. Wireless where useful. Satellite where necessary. Monitoring and policy over all of it.

Signals Worth Watching

  • Post-quantum networking is leaving the lab. VPNs and firewalls are now part of the conversation.
  • AI networking is becoming physical. Cooling, switching, optics, and operations are one design problem.
  • Cloud networking is becoming more private by default. Teams need explicit egress and clear ownership.
  • BGP, IPv6, RPKI, and registry quality remain core Internet hygiene.
  • Agentic troubleshooting is coming, but it will reward teams with good data models first.
  • Wireless and edge access are becoming part of business continuity, not just convenience.

Engineer's Takeaways

Clean up route ownership.

Know who controls DNS.

Make cloud egress explicit.

Document where inspection happens.

Treat IPv6 and routing security as normal work.

Build labs that look like production.

Do not ask AI to automate a network you cannot already explain.

That last point matters. The best teams will use automation and AI to speed up good operations. They will not use them to hide poor design.

What To Watch In May

Watch where post-quantum networking shows up next: VPNs, firewalls, branch hardware, and migration guides.

Also watch AI data center networking beyond the hype cycle. The interesting parts are cooling, Ethernet fabrics, optics, observability, and funding models that do not require replacing everything at once.

Finally, keep an eye on cloud private access and agentic troubleshooting. Those two areas are quietly becoming the daily workbench for network engineers.