All vendors

2015 – present

F5

The application delivery company, and the platform taught most on this site.

F5 is the deepest chapter of the whole record: a decade that runs from a first administrator certification through the full specialist ladder to the instructor's chair, three DevCentral MVP years, and the flagship hub of this site.

01

The certification ladder

The chapter opens in 2015 with the F5 Certified Administrator, earned while distributing the platform commercially. The specialist ladder followed: Certified Technology Specialist in LTM, DNS, ASM, and APM, then the two solution-expert peaks, F5-CSE Cloud (2021) and F5-CSE Security (2022). Climbing every module of BIG-IP one exam at a time is exactly the preparation a full-time instructor needs, and that is where it led.

02

The instructor's chair and DevCentral

F5 Authorized Instructor since 2020, delivering twelve official BIG-IP and TMOS courses, from administration fundamentals through LTM, DNS, ASM/AWAF, APM, iRules, and troubleshooting. F5's DevCentral community named Rodolfo an MVP three consecutive years, 2022 through 2024. On this site, F5 is the flagship: the largest vendor hub, with calculators, decoders, and explainers built for the same engineers who sit in those classes.

Certifications

F5 Authorized Instructor (since 2020). Current certifications: F5-CSE Security, F5-CSE Cloud, F5-CTS LTM / DNS / ASM / APM, F5-CA. DevCentral MVP 2022, 2023, 2024. Full detail on the credentials page.

Founding stories

1996

F5 Labs (later F5 Networks, today F5, Inc.)

Seattle, Washington · Founders: Jeffrey Hussey

Founded in Seattle in 1996 as F5 Labs, the company took its name from the top of the Fujita tornado scale - the year the movie Twister filled theaters - a fitting badge for a product built to stand in front of a storm of web traffic. Its bet was that the young web would need machines whose whole job was distributing load across servers, and the BIG/ip load balancer that followed in 1997 turned that bet into a category. Jeffrey Hussey ran the company to its 1999 IPO; John McAdam then led it through the era in which load balancing grew up into application delivery.

The timeline

  1. F5 Labs opens in Seattle

    The company is founded to solve a brand-new problem: web sites falling over under their own popularity. The name comes from the strongest category of tornado - traffic as weather.

    Founding lore widely reported in company histories.

  2. BIG/ip ships

    The first product, the BIG/ip load balancer, distributes traffic across servers and monitors their health. The spelling changes over the years; the franchise never does - BIG-IP remains the heart of F5 three decades on.

  3. IPO in the dot-com window

    June 1999: F5 lists on NASDAQ as FFIV, riding the same wave that floated the era's networking names. John McAdam takes the CEO chair in 2000 and holds it for most of two decades.

  4. TMOS v9: the full-proxy rewrite

    BIG-IP version 9 rebuilds the product on TMOS, a purpose-built traffic operating system that fully terminates both sides of every connection. The full-proxy architecture plus iRules scripting - and the DevCentral community around it - turn a load balancer into a programmable platform, and define how the product is taught to this day.

  5. François Locoh-Donou takes over

    April 2017: the Ciena veteran becomes President and CEO, inheriting a hardware-anchored ADC leader and steering it toward software, SaaS, and security.

  6. NGINX

    F5 acquires NGINX, the company behind the web server and reverse proxy that fronts much of the internet, for roughly $670 million - planting the flag in open source and modern application stacks.

    Announced March 2019, completed May 2019.

  7. Shape Security

    The roughly $1 billion acquisition of Shape Security closes in January 2020, bringing bot defense and anti-fraud built on machine learning - the seed of today's Distributed Cloud Bot Defense.

  8. Rodolfo's chapter: the anchor platformRodolfo's chapter

    Certifications from 2015, F5 Authorized Instructor since 2020, DevCentral MVP 2022 through 2024: twelve official BIG-IP and TMOS courses, and the anchor of the teaching practice this site grows from.

  9. Volterra, and a new name

    January 2021: F5 buys Volterra for about $500 million as the foundation of its edge and multi-cloud platform; Threat Stack ($68 million) follows in September. In November the company formally renames from F5 Networks to F5, Inc. - the 'Networks' era officially closes.

  10. F5 Distributed Cloud Services

    The Volterra, Shape, and BIG-IP lineages converge into F5 Distributed Cloud Services - SaaS-delivered web application and API protection (WAAP), multi-cloud networking, and edge compute under one console.

  11. The AI security chapter opens

    F5 folds data-in-transit classification (LeakSignal, February) and enterprise AI runtime security (CalypsoAI, closed September 26 for $145.2 million) into the newly named Application Delivery and Security Platform, introducing F5 AI Guardrails and AI Red Team days later.

    F5 10-K FY2025; announced consideration $180M per the Sept 11 8-K.

Flagship products and solutions

  • BIG-IP (LTM, DNS, APM, Advanced WAF)The flagship application delivery and security family - local and global traffic management, access, and web application firewalling - on hardware, virtual editions, and F5OS platforms (rSeries, VELOS).
  • NGINXThe web server, reverse proxy, and Kubernetes ingress that carries a huge share of the world's sites; F5's bridge into open source and modern app teams.
  • F5 Distributed Cloud ServicesSaaS-delivered WAAP, bot defense, API security, multi-cloud networking, and edge compute - the Volterra and Shape lineages unified.
  • F5 Application Delivery and Security Platform (ADSP)The 2025-era umbrella converging BIG-IP, NGINX, and Distributed Cloud into one platform for delivering and securing every app and API - now including AI Guardrails and AI Red Team.

Key innovations

  • The full proxyTMOS terminates client and server sides independently, letting BIG-IP inspect, transform, and secure traffic in both directions - the architectural idea that separated it from packet-forwarding load balancers.
  • iRules and DevCentralEvent-driven Tcl scripting on the data path, and the community that grew around it - programmability as a product feature a decade before 'infrastructure as code' was a slogan.
  • From ADC to WAAPThe deliberate migration of an appliance franchise into SaaS-delivered app and API protection without abandoning the installed base - BIG-IP, NGINX, and Distributed Cloud as one continuum.

Main markets

F5's home market is application delivery and application security for the enterprise: the traffic in front of banks, carriers, governments, and most of the Fortune 500 crosses a BIG-IP, an NGINX, or both. The company's center of gravity has shifted from hardware ADCs toward software, SaaS security services, and - since 2025 - securing AI applications and inference.

Analyst standing

  • For most of two decades F5 defined the application delivery controller category analysts measured everyone else against; as the category itself dissolved into WAAP and multi-cloud application services, F5 is consistently placed among the leaders and major players of those successor markets.