We were also an original customer. When we were told we had to upgrade,
Cisco originally said it would cost triple

what we originally paid. When we threaten to drop them and go with
another vendor, we got the price down to

a very reasonable price. Talk to your rep. There is a lot of wiggle
room.

 

Bob Lavner

Network/Server Manager

Assumption College

500 Salisbury St.

Worcester,MA. 01609

508-767-7006

774-452-2792

 

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Stanclift, Michael
Sent: Tuesday, August 11, 2009 9:31 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Plans for Windows 7

 

We are an original Perfigo customer, and were eligible for about a 75%
discount off the cost of the appliances. You may want to talk to your
rep and see if you qualify.

 

Michael Stanclift

Network Analyst

Rockhurst University

 

http://help.rockhurst.edu <http://help.rockhurst.edu/> 

(816) 501-4231

 

PThink before you print!

 

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Speight, Howard
Sent: Tuesday, August 11, 2009 7:22 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Plans for Windows 7

 

I'm guessing he's talking about moving from software based CCA (Perfigo)
to appliance based CCA (still Perfigo, just a different name). Certainly
you can run the software until support is pulled, but make no mistake,
it will be pulled. We purchased Perfigo at version 3.1 or something
like, now it will cost about four times as much to use NAC 4.5.

 

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Lane Clark
Sent: Monday, August 10, 2009 6:59 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Plans for Windows 7

 

I think I have missed something.  You say expensive upgrade that coming?
Care to expand?

 

Thanks.

 

Lane

On Mon, Aug 10, 2009 at 2:41 PM, Hennessey, Sean <[email protected]>
wrote:

It is and it will probably start hitting the market sooner rather than
later with new systems. Also, people with the right kind of Technet
membership can download and use it shortly as well, not to mention all
of the RC versions popping up everywhere. I'm very excited about the
release as I've been playing with the RC and am really impressed.

 

This underlines one of my major problems with NAC - they follow a
business strategy when the vast majority (as far as I can tell) of
businesses using the product are educational - where we have limited
control over the variety of OSes we have to support, generally get them
immediately, and end up bypassing NAC for those devices. That aligned
with the lack of role nesting that makes granular work impractical,
makes it virtually unusable. We are having to think very seriously as to
whether or not we're going continue with NAC (and the enforced, and
expensive, upgrade coming down the pipe) or look toward something else.

 

-          Sean

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sean Hennessey, CCNA

Network and Information Security Systems Administrator

Office of Technical Support

University of Portland

w: (503) 943 7877, c: (503) 710 6347

 

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Lane Clark
Sent: Monday, August 10, 2009 1:24 PM 


To: [email protected]

Subject: Re: Plans for Windows 7 

 

According to information week, Windows 7 is now available to business
clients.  See link:

 

http://www.informationweek.com/news/windows/operatingsystems/showArticle
.jhtml?articleID=219100442&cid=nl_IW_daily_html

 

Cisco has got to get this done.  We can't always be so far behind,
especially when it comes to the security of our networks.

 

Lane

 

 

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