Last year the books were published in April and in August. I got mine as a
perq for being in the consultants program. So far this year - no go. Even
working for Cisco's largest gold partner in the US I can't seem to get Cisco
to fork a copy over.

Nice link, by the way.

Chuck

-----Original Message-----
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
Kevin Wigle
Sent:   Wednesday, May 23, 2001 4:15 PM
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        Re: Books with product suggestions? [7:5568]

but there is an on-line version also:

http://www.cisco.com/warp/customer/752/qrg/

which requires a CCO login

and: http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/752/qrg/

which only let's you order the hard copy version.

and it says that the English version is printed 3 times a year.......

What I find interesting is that it also points out what products the
competitors have in the same category.

Kevin Wigle

----- Original Message -----
From: "Chuck Larrieu"
To:
Sent: Wednesday, 23 May, 2001 17:41
Subject: RE: Books with product suggestions? [7:5568]


> An interesting approach, if one can lay hands on it, is to be found in the
> Cisco Products quick Reference Guide, which for each of the Cisco product
> categories suggests appropriate situations for use, and competitor
products
> the Cisco product competes with directly.
>
> Published semi-annually. There is a new one out, but Cisco has yet to mail
> me my copy. Maybe due to the cost of postage and their current financial
> situation? ;->
>
> Chuck
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
> Howard C. Berkowitz
> Sent: Wednesday, May 23, 2001 2:20 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: Books with product suggestions? [7:5568]
>
> >Hello!
> >
> >I was wondering if anyone had run across a book that recommends products
to
> >use in certain situations? There seems to be so many solutions, and
modules
> >that you can add to each product, that I am confused about when you would
> >want to take one route over another.
> >
> >For example, say the situation calls for the multiplexing of a few T1s.
The
> >book might say you can do this with this series of routers, just adding
> this
> >module, and following these procedures:
> >
> >And it might say, you can also accomplish this by attaching this sort of
> >equipment to a serial interface; however, there are some drawbacks and
here
> >is what they are:
> >
> >(Those examples are completely made up, and I don't know what I'm talking
> >about!)
> >
> >I would hope to find something like this in a design book of somekind,
but
> I
> >haven't even looked at any.
> >
>
>
> As with everything else, It Depends.  In my own design books, I will
> often review the options in the kinds of boxes that you might
> interconnect for a given solution, but the rate of change of specific
> products is so fast that book publication time cycles are far too
> long to stay current.
>
> Not :-) like courseware such as CID, which for years had a Cisco ATM
> Products slide in which EVERY component had been discontinued, or, at
> the very least, superceded by one or two generations.
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