There is one sensible argument against what I've said, but this isn't it.
Try again
and put some thought into it.


"Steven A. Ridder" wrote:

> No one ever accused cisco of being a charity...
>
> --
>
> RFC 1149 Compliant.
>
> ""Neal Rauhauser 402-301-9555""  wrote in message
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > This one is just too juicy to pass up :-)
> >
> >    The concise question is "Why would you use linux/freebsd or an
> appliance
> > based on
> > them instead of purchasing a real router?"
> >
> >
> >   Cisco rules the backbone, they do enough on lan switching to get my
vote
> > their, and
> > their Aironet radios are OK if you're abusing 802.11b by running it as a
> > wireless
> > internet provider but ...
> >
> >   CISCO KNOWS SQUAT ABOUT ROUTER/WIRELESS INTEGRATION!
> >
> >
> >   There, I've said it. Detaled proof of concept is below:
> >
> >
> >   Lets consider a network I recently installed. I've got a tower on a
> > building on a
> > bluff that overlooks a valley where there is no DSL service. On the
> opposite
> > side of
> > the valley I have another tower on a building on a bluff. The two towers
> are
> > separated
> > by about three miles. Some sites in the valley can see one side, some can
> > see the
> > other, neither site would cover the whole valley properly.
> >
> >   The building closest to my  head end  has an elevator shaft on top with
> my
> > small
> > tower bolted to the side. There is room for a good sized 19" cabinet and
> AC
> > power. The
> > building on the opposite side of the valley has a beautiful 50' tower on
> top
> > but the
> > only facilties on the roof are a NEMA outdoor enclosure. The NEMA
> enclosure
> > can take a
> > couple of radios and maybe a small hub but would not take any router
> larger
> > than a
> > 1605.
> >
> >   So, this one building has a backhaul link, it has a customer cell, it
> > feeds the cell
> > across the valley, and I have two other customers attached to this
> location
> > that
> > received dedicated point to point links for a total of one cell and four
> > point to point
> > wireless links. There is also a wired link to our customers in the
> building.
> >
> >  From the layer three perspective this location has four /29s used for
> point
> > to point
> > (why not /30s? you tell me, but ponder the wonder of VLANs and OSPF first
> > :-] ), one
> > /27 that is the customer cell, and a /29 for the wired customers.
> >
> >   How would you build a network with six total subnets, one wireless
cell,
> > and four
> > point to point links, using only Cisco equipment? This is the parts list
> > with estimated
> > pricing:
> >
> > Cisco 2620             $1500
> > Catalyst 1912          $300
> > Aironet AP352          $650
> > four x WGB352          $1800
> > total                  $4250
> >
> >   Now consider the alternative - a $400 PC, a $50 flash card, $200 for a
> > linux based
> > wireless capable OS from http://www.mikrotik.com, two PCI Aironet cards
> > ($350) and a
> > Dlink quad port ethernet card ($100). $1100 total
> >
> >  I still needed the $650 AP and one external $450 WGB352 - $1100 for
this.
> >
> >
> >   So, for $2200 I got the effect of purchasing $4250 of refurbished Cisco
> > gear.
> >
> >
> >    Now lets look at the soft benefits of MikroTik vs IOS:
> >
> > Feature                  MikroTik                IOS
> > ssh                      yes                            with provider
> image
> > OSPF                     yes                            yes
> > PPTP server              yes                            not that I can
> find
> > PPPoE server             yes                            yes, clumsy
> > rate shape PPPoE client  bit rate per user              nope, just IOS
> > traffic controls
> >
> > NAT                      yes                            yes
> > processor                AMD 1 gig                      40 MHz PPC
> > memory                   256 meg                        max out at 64 meg
> > firewall                 ipchains(cool)                 clumsy access
> lists
> > user interface           killer CLI                     clumsy CLI
> > annual support           $500 or so including aironet   about 3X MT costs
> >
> >
> >  Over a three year period the MikroTik box is going to cost me about one
> > fourth of what
> > I'd pay for a minimal Cisco solution and the performance of the MT is on
> par
> > with a
> > 7206 /w an NPE300.
> >
> >
> >  Now there are a lot of reasons to prefer Cisco in the backbone over
> > MikroTik, but I'm
> > not going to say anything :-) You'll just have to download the free eval
> of
> > MikroTik
> > and make it work with your Cisco lab if you want to know ...
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > > I always see people asking for Linux/Unix sims for BGP
> > > or just to simulate a router in General. I for the life of me can't
> > > figure out why a Linux router could be better than a 2501 and
> > > it would cost me more to build a Linux box. I see the same with




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