About Packet Bytes

PacketBytes is a personal engineering journal focused on how real packet networks are designed, evolved, and operated at scale — beyond configuration, into intent.

Our Mission

PacketBytes exists to document and share the engineering thinking behind real-world packet networks — not as isolated technologies, but as interconnected systems operating at scale.

The focus here is on architecture, control, and behavior: how networks are designed, evolved, and operated under real constraints of performance, reliability, cost, and failure. Rather than treating protocols as configurations to be memorized, PacketBytes examines the intent, trade-offs, and consequences that shape production networks.

From the reader's perspective, this means content grounded in real engineering experience. Alongside conceptual depth, you will find hands-on explorations, design patterns, and practical walkthroughs drawn from networks that run in production across diverse environments. These are not abstract labs, but exercises and examples shaped by operational reality and established best practices.

PacketBytes is also meant to be a conversation. Readers are encouraged to reflect, question, and share their own experiences — whether through discussions on articles or via the contact channel. The goal is collective clarity: learning not just from written material, but from the shared experience of engineers working with real systems worldwide.

This is a space for engineers who care about why systems behave the way they do — and who value clarity, correctness, and long-term sustainability over shortcuts and surface-level understanding.

Meet the Author

Parveen Jindgar

Parveen Jindgar

Engineering Leader

I am an engineering leader with over 20 years of experience working on large-scale packet networks in Service Provider and latency-sensitive environments.

My work has centered on end-to-end architectural ownership of backbone and edge infrastructures — spanning platform and vendor selection, routing and control-plane design, and the evolution of networks under real operational and economic constraints. These systems operate at scale, where performance, reliability, cost efficiency, and long-term sustainability must be balanced deliberately, not optimised in isolation.

Over the years, I have been closely involved in multi-vendor environments, platform lifecycle decisions, and the unification and simplification of complex networks into cohesive, production-grade systems. A significant part of this work involves driving optimisation, enabling lower-cost technology adoption, and making architectural decisions that improve operability without sacrificing correctness or resilience.

PacketBytes is a personal space where I document the engineering thinking behind these systems — examining architectures, control planes, and design trade-offs as they behave under real traffic, real failures, and real operational pressure, beyond configuration and into intent.

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