> -----Original Message----- > From: Robert Blayzor [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Sunday, May 27, 2007 3:03 PM > To: Ted Mittelstaedt > Cc: [email protected] > Subject: Re: [c-nsp] Version of Cisco IOS not supported on NPE300 > > > Ted Mittelstaedt wrote: > > I don't see how that could be the case since the SmartNet package is > > selected by the router chassis, not what cards are in it. I think what > > you meant to say is that Cisco won't renew the HARDWARE coverage of > > SmartNet on the NPE300, but SmartNet contains two components - hardware > > coverage, and IOS update rights - and Cisco will happily renew smartnet > > forever. Of course, once they stop releasing new IOS for a particular > > chassis it is kind of pointless to keep paying the renewals. > > > It absolutely covers the cards inside the chassis, and if your purchase > your 7200's from Cisco, as configured, they know exactly what you have > purchased. If you have an NPE-300 (or any other EoL card that effects > the core operation of the product) they'll not allow you to renew the > Smartnet until you get the router back under something they can support. > > Trust me, I know. I had seven 7200 NPE-300's I had to upgrade to > NPE-Gx's this year to get them back under support. They would not renew > them because they knew that we purchasd them originally with NPE-300's > in them.
Well, I work for a company that is both an ISP and a Cisco reseller and I've renewed a number of SmartNets, on old Eol equipment, for customers, with no problem. If you are large enough to buy direct from Cisco then the rules may be very different. Of course, your also paying about 1/2 or less the cost that the rest of us have to pay (including what us resellers have to pay to get the stuff from distribution) so I don't have any sympathy. > That wasn't the only reason for the upgrades, but is part of > the reason. > > Your claims above is also not true. Case in point, Cisco EoL the > NPE-300. There's no sense in renewing your Smartnet as they've > completely stopped supporting the NPE-300 both hardware wise and on new > software releases. The "ok it boots, lets use it" doesn't mean they > support it if you start having a problem. > There is sense in renewing the smartnet, as long as Cisco still comes out with new IOS releases that meet the "ok it boots" criteria, IF you are willing to be self-supporting. If my router works fine with a particular IOS version and an NPE-300 and I update to a new IOS version under Smartnet, merely to get a new feature, and the router starts having problems, then I can simply downgrade to the previous version. At that time Smartnet loses value. But, that time might happen many releases in the future. It all depends on what kinds of risks you want to take. Larger orgs are not able to take as big risks as smaller ones. They have to keep things under vendor service contracts. Smaller orgs can take larger risks including simply not renewing. Ted _______________________________________________ cisco-nsp mailing list [email protected] https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/
