Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2003-02-25 Thread Geoff Kuchera
 
 somebody
 
like Ibasis in case their voice switches got destroyed again - as during
9-11, people saw that while traditional voice service was severely

affected,

packet networks like the Internet were still functioning, so in these
 
 kinds
 
of circumstances, you could say that packetized voice might actually be

more

reliable than regular voice.But again, it takes very careful design
 
 to
 
achieve this kind of reliability.


Chuck  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


sure. ok. agreed.

OTOH, buggy / unreliable software is the same, no matter whose platform
 
 it
 
runs on. A long time ago in a galaxy far away I was able to successfully
crash Sun Unix boxes several times through sheer ignorance. one was in
 
 the
 
Sun Sys Admin training class I was taking, the rest were Sun boxes that

Big


Brokerage Firm had installed in the office where I worked. Proof that

there


ain't no such thing as foolproof because this here fool can break just
about anything ;-

BTW, you have just ht on the major reason for NOT doing packetized
 
 voice.
 
Or


maybe just limiting it to toll bypass, while keeping your PBX. Sometimes
 
 I
 
think the only real selling point for AVVID is that is kewl  The
 
 biggest
 
selling points for Windows way back when were the screen savers and the
games. MCSE = Microsoft Certified Solitaire Expert


nrf  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Well, this kind of thing cuts both ways.  A reseller I know is trying
 
 to
 
sell AVVID and is on dangerous ground precisely because CM is on
 
 Windows
 
and


the potential customer has had some very bad experiences with Windows
servers due to reliability issues and so forth.  The customer is

deciding


whether to go with AVVID or a traditional PBX, and the fact that AVVID

is


so


Windows-centric is a significant minus, and in fact could be the whole

basis


for losing the deal, because the customer has to know that his phone

system


is going to always be up without any dithering around.  Yes, yes, you

can


do


things like clustering to improve the reliability of CM, but the simple

fact


of the matter is that Windows has a well-founded reputation for
unreliability when compared to UNIX, and when you're talking about
 
 phone
 
systems, unreliability is definitely something that a potential
 
 customer
 
does not want to hear.  Not at all.   This is why you rarely see any

vendors


of enterprise software (like DB's, ERP, CRM, SCM, etc. etc.) that don't
offer a UNIX version - because just like a phone system, these are

crucial


applications that just have to reliable.

Chuck  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


for whatever reason, Cisco and Microsoft are partnered for a lot of

things.


Call Manager for *nix??? hahahahahahahahahaha

IIRC the last Cisco management software presentation, just about

everything


is on NT or Win2K boxes these days.

I believe it's called Market Share - there are far more Microsoft

certified


folk than *nix certified folk. Try selling AVVID when you also have to

tell


a customer that he has to hire a *nix capable individual or retrain

his


existing Microsoft capable people. Same for the management platform.

same


for any of the security related software products.



sergei  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Makes sense, - M$ products need it more...


DAve Diaz wrote:



Remember cisco have no money just $21 Billion dollars in the bank,

so


no


new hardware for a while, no unix in a security lab that is

absurb,


Dave



From: markh
Reply-To: markh
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]
Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:33:52 -0500

really?
--



I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there

will


be


no


UNIX, only NT.
I was there and it's true.

MS

_
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at

http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp.




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http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=63725t=17848
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Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2003-02-25 Thread nrf
 talking about a solution that is
 REALLY buggy and unreliable.  For example, if your software is only
 guaranteed to run at 3 9's, and your OS is also only guaranteed to run
 
  at 3
 
 9's, then overall we're talking about a less-than-3-9's of a solution.
 
 You can actually run packetized voice very reliably, and not just for
 
  toll
 
 bypass (although it is definitely true that toll-bypass  is the easiest
 
  and
 
 most mature kind of packetized voice to do).  The key is that you have
 
  to
 
 design things in  a certain way to maximize your reliability.  Many
 
 carriers
 
 like SBC use packetized voice with soft-switch signalling in certain
 
  parts
 
 of their network, and then you have packetized voice wholesalers like
 
 Ibasis
 
 that have massive available voice capacity and a good reputation for
 reliability.  There was a huge amount of serious talk after 9-11 for
 
 Verizon
 
 and other carriers to contract for backup voice capacity through
 
  somebody
 
 like Ibasis in case their voice switches got destroyed again - as
during
 9-11, people saw that while traditional voice service was severely
 
 affected,
 
 packet networks like the Internet were still functioning, so in these
 
  kinds
 
 of circumstances, you could say that packetized voice might actually be
 
 more
 
 reliable than regular voice.But again, it takes very careful design
 
  to
 
 achieve this kind of reliability.
 
 
 Chuck  wrote in message
 news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 sure. ok. agreed.
 
 OTOH, buggy / unreliable software is the same, no matter whose
platform
 
  it
 
 runs on. A long time ago in a galaxy far away I was able to
successfully
 crash Sun Unix boxes several times through sheer ignorance. one was in
 
  the
 
 Sun Sys Admin training class I was taking, the rest were Sun boxes
that
 
 Big
 
 
 Brokerage Firm had installed in the office where I worked. Proof that
 
 there
 
 
 ain't no such thing as foolproof because this here fool can break
just
 about anything ;-
 
 BTW, you have just ht on the major reason for NOT doing packetized
 
  voice.
 
 Or
 
 
 maybe just limiting it to toll bypass, while keeping your PBX.
Sometimes
 
  I
 
 think the only real selling point for AVVID is that is kewl  The
 
  biggest
 
 selling points for Windows way back when were the screen savers and
the
 games. MCSE = Microsoft Certified Solitaire Expert
 
 
 nrf  wrote in message
 news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 Well, this kind of thing cuts both ways.  A reseller I know is trying
 
  to
 
 sell AVVID and is on dangerous ground precisely because CM is on
 
  Windows
 
 and
 
 
 the potential customer has had some very bad experiences with Windows
 servers due to reliability issues and so forth.  The customer is
 
 deciding
 
 
 whether to go with AVVID or a traditional PBX, and the fact that
AVVID
 
 is
 
 
 so
 
 
 Windows-centric is a significant minus, and in fact could be the
whole
 
 basis
 
 
 for losing the deal, because the customer has to know that his phone
 
 system
 
 
 is going to always be up without any dithering around.  Yes, yes, you
 
 can
 
 
 do
 
 
 things like clustering to improve the reliability of CM, but the
simple
 
 fact
 
 
 of the matter is that Windows has a well-founded reputation for
 unreliability when compared to UNIX, and when you're talking about
 
  phone
 
 systems, unreliability is definitely something that a potential
 
  customer
 
 does not want to hear.  Not at all.   This is why you rarely see any
 
 vendors
 
 
 of enterprise software (like DB's, ERP, CRM, SCM, etc. etc.) that
don't
 offer a UNIX version - because just like a phone system, these are
 
 crucial
 
 
 applications that just have to reliable.
 
 Chuck  wrote in message
 news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 for whatever reason, Cisco and Microsoft are partnered for a lot of
 
 things.
 
 
 Call Manager for *nix??? hahahahahahahahahaha
 
 IIRC the last Cisco management software presentation, just about
 
 everything
 
 
 is on NT or Win2K boxes these days.
 
 I believe it's called Market Share - there are far more Microsoft
 
 certified
 
 
 folk than *nix certified folk. Try selling AVVID when you also have
to
 
 tell
 
 
 a customer that he has to hire a *nix capable individual or retrain
 
 his
 
 
 existing Microsoft capable people. Same for the management platform.
 
 same
 
 
 for any of the security related software products.
 
 
 
 sergei  wrote in message
 news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 Makes sense, - M$ products need it more...
 
 
 DAve Diaz wrote:
 
 
 
 Remember cisco have no money just $21 Billion dollars in the bank,
 
 so
 
 
 no
 
 
 new hardware for a while, no unix in a security lab that is
 
 absurb,
 
 
 Dave
 
 
 
 From: markh
 Reply-To: markh
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]
 Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:33:52 -0500
 
 really?
 --
 
 
 
 I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there
 
 will
 
 
 be
 
 
 no
 
 
 UNIX, only NT.
 I was there and it's true.
 
 MS

Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2003-02-24 Thread Geoff Kuchera

folk than *nix certified folk. Try selling AVVID when you also have to

tell

a customer that he has to hire a *nix capable individual or retrain
 
 his
 
existing Microsoft capable people. Same for the management platform.

same

for any of the security related software products.



sergei  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Makes sense, - M$ products need it more...


DAve Diaz wrote:


Remember cisco have no money just $21 Billion dollars in the bank,

so

no

new hardware for a while, no unix in a security lab that is
 
 absurb,
 
Dave


From: markh
Reply-To: markh
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]
Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:33:52 -0500

really?
--


I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there
 
 will
 
be

no

UNIX, only NT.
I was there and it's true.

MS

_
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at

http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp.




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=63657t=17848
--
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2003-02-24 Thread nrf
to
 sell AVVID and is on dangerous ground precisely because CM is on
Windows
 
 and
 
 the potential customer has had some very bad experiences with Windows
 servers due to reliability issues and so forth.  The customer is
 
  deciding
 
 whether to go with AVVID or a traditional PBX, and the fact that AVVID
 
  is
 
 so
 
 Windows-centric is a significant minus, and in fact could be the whole
 
 basis
 
 for losing the deal, because the customer has to know that his phone
 
 system
 
 is going to always be up without any dithering around.  Yes, yes, you
 
  can
 
 do
 
 things like clustering to improve the reliability of CM, but the simple
 
 fact
 
 of the matter is that Windows has a well-founded reputation for
 unreliability when compared to UNIX, and when you're talking about
phone
 systems, unreliability is definitely something that a potential
customer
 does not want to hear.  Not at all.   This is why you rarely see any
 
 vendors
 
 of enterprise software (like DB's, ERP, CRM, SCM, etc. etc.) that don't
 offer a UNIX version - because just like a phone system, these are
 
  crucial
 
 applications that just have to reliable.
 
 Chuck  wrote in message
 news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 for whatever reason, Cisco and Microsoft are partnered for a lot of
 
 things.
 
 Call Manager for *nix??? hahahahahahahahahaha
 
 IIRC the last Cisco management software presentation, just about
 
 everything
 
 is on NT or Win2K boxes these days.
 
 I believe it's called Market Share - there are far more Microsoft
 
 certified
 
 folk than *nix certified folk. Try selling AVVID when you also have to
 
 tell
 
 a customer that he has to hire a *nix capable individual or retrain
 
  his
 
 existing Microsoft capable people. Same for the management platform.
 
 same
 
 for any of the security related software products.
 
 
 
 sergei  wrote in message
 news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 Makes sense, - M$ products need it more...
 
 
 DAve Diaz wrote:
 
 
 Remember cisco have no money just $21 Billion dollars in the bank,
 
 so
 
 no
 
 new hardware for a while, no unix in a security lab that is
 
  absurb,
 
 Dave
 
 
 From: markh
 Reply-To: markh
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]
 Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:33:52 -0500
 
 really?
 --
 
 
 I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there
 
  will
 
 be
 
 no
 
 UNIX, only NT.
 I was there and it's true.
 
 MS
 
 _
 Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at
 
 http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp.




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=63662t=17848
--
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Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


RE: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2002-07-25 Thread Mark W. Odette II

May I ad this little edict that Buggy/Unreliable OS's is just a bad
wrap that the community has labeled to MS WINDOWS... without much
explanation of WHAT was the unreliability.

Indeed, Security is a different story, and there is plenty of reliable
argument to that topic... but to constantly perpetuate this argument
that Windows is unreliable and buggy makes me ill.

What makes the story of it being buggy/unreliable has always been
related to device drivers that sloppy-a$$ programmers whip out for
sub-standard chipsets on the Intel platform running Windows.  Not to
mention, the OS's that have been the most unreliable/buggy have been the
desktop OS's- NOT the Server platform Windows NT.  If you think that you
should use that Windows 98 box as your company's Server- it's your own
stupid fault for all the headaches that are derived from therein.

I've worked predominantly in the NT environment for over 8 years, going
through the NT 3.51, 4.0, and now Windows 2000 version of the server
platform, and I ONLY have had servers crash when a vendor-specific
device driver was updated (ahem, Intel ironically was the culprit, and
they were supposed to be the other half of the Win-tel agreement).
I've also maintained a fair share of different-flavored *nix boxes that
performed similar functions, for which they suffered the same ailments-
bad drivers for add-on hardware, whether it be NIC's, RAID Controllers,
Telephony boards, or power failure.  One thing for sure, the NT box
didn't spend 30 minutes spewing INODE errors all over the place once
power was restored... unlike the ATT Unix brothers did... And yes, I
know, NT uses a journaling file system as opposed to the file system
Unix uses.  But for heaven's sake! The DB application on the *nix box
should have the corruption issues to worry about, NOT the OS!

Most of these Windows NT Servers under my command were Computer
Telephony systems, a.k.a., IVR's.  They ran like a champ for several
years without a reboot... the ones that ran for shorter periods were
maintenance reboots for Service Packs or because of Power Failure to the
location the box was residing.  These servers were both DEC Alpha's and
Intel-based OEM and Clone machines.

As I said before, just as much as it is a problem for the *nix platform,
the things that make the OS unreliable is the cheap hardware and
sloppy device drivers that are applied to the system.  Proper
installation, and hardening of the OS for the specific purpose it is
supporting (read don't use the same machine you've set up as your server
as your desktop too, installing all kinds of non-server related programs
on it like free-ware and demos of programs found in the center or back
of some periodical you got in the mail), and the Windows NT / 2000
Server will be just as stable as the next implementation of Solaris on a
Sparc station.

And again, as Chuck pointed out, if the Applications developed to run on
the Windows NT / 2000 platform were developed properly, than the servers
would be reliable in that respect too.  I'm not a programmer by any
means, but from what I've observed, you can have just as many crashes
for building crappy DLL's as you can from improper handling/use of C
library modules on a *nix box.  Not to mention, both types of
programmers need to know how to program for Memory Address handling.


But who am I to argue... the whole slamming of Windblows is probably
just because some bull-headed *nix lackey is just pi$$ed off he can't go
rebuild the kernel half a dozen times to tweak the system on
Windows.

And as a final note, I do maintain the argument that ALL of the OS's out
there have their own place in the industry; there isn't just ONE O.S.
that addresses all the use/needs of any particular business (keeping
Support in mind).

Now- Back to our regularly scheduled commentary on Cisco Studies.

-Mark

-Original Message-
From: nrf [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Thursday, July 25, 2002 12:07 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

Buggy/unreliable software is indeed the same anywhere.  But when
combined
with buggy/unreliable OS's, now we're talking about a solution that is
REALLY buggy and unreliable.  For example, if your software is only
guaranteed to run at 3 9's, and your OS is also only guaranteed to run
at 3
9's, then overall we're talking about a less-than-3-9's of a solution.

You can actually run packetized voice very reliably, and not just for
toll
bypass (although it is definitely true that toll-bypass  is the easiest
and
most mature kind of packetized voice to do).  The key is that you have
to
design things in  a certain way to maximize your reliability.  Many
carriers
like SBC use packetized voice with soft-switch signalling in certain
parts
of their network, and then you have packetized voice wholesalers like
Ibasis
that have massive available voice capacity and a good reputation for
reliability.  There was a huge amount of serious talk after 9-11 for
Verizon
and other

Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2002-07-25 Thread nrf

You can argue about the technical merits of Windows vs. UNIX all you want,
but you must admit that perception is a powerful force.  Whether something
happens to be reliable or unreliable or whatever, and for whatever reason,
if people in the industry think that something is unreliable and hear from
others that it is unreliable, then for all practical purposes, it is
effectively unreliable.  Perception can often trump reality, particularly on
the sell-side of things.

So the point is, when Cisco says that it has based its soft-PBX on Windows,
that just provides yet another reason for a customer not to buy it (along
with the well-known other reasons not to buy VoIP like poor-quality calls,
expensive phones, etc.)



Mark W. Odette II  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 May I ad this little edict that Buggy/Unreliable OS's is just a bad
 wrap that the community has labeled to MS WINDOWS... without much
 explanation of WHAT was the unreliability.

 Indeed, Security is a different story, and there is plenty of reliable
 argument to that topic... but to constantly perpetuate this argument
 that Windows is unreliable and buggy makes me ill.

 What makes the story of it being buggy/unreliable has always been
 related to device drivers that sloppy-a$$ programmers whip out for
 sub-standard chipsets on the Intel platform running Windows.  Not to
 mention, the OS's that have been the most unreliable/buggy have been the
 desktop OS's- NOT the Server platform Windows NT.  If you think that you
 should use that Windows 98 box as your company's Server- it's your own
 stupid fault for all the headaches that are derived from therein.

 I've worked predominantly in the NT environment for over 8 years, going
 through the NT 3.51, 4.0, and now Windows 2000 version of the server
 platform, and I ONLY have had servers crash when a vendor-specific
 device driver was updated (ahem, Intel ironically was the culprit, and
 they were supposed to be the other half of the Win-tel agreement).
 I've also maintained a fair share of different-flavored *nix boxes that
 performed similar functions, for which they suffered the same ailments-
 bad drivers for add-on hardware, whether it be NIC's, RAID Controllers,
 Telephony boards, or power failure.  One thing for sure, the NT box
 didn't spend 30 minutes spewing INODE errors all over the place once
 power was restored... unlike the ATT Unix brothers did... And yes, I
 know, NT uses a journaling file system as opposed to the file system
 Unix uses.  But for heaven's sake! The DB application on the *nix box
 should have the corruption issues to worry about, NOT the OS!

 Most of these Windows NT Servers under my command were Computer
 Telephony systems, a.k.a., IVR's.  They ran like a champ for several
 years without a reboot... the ones that ran for shorter periods were
 maintenance reboots for Service Packs or because of Power Failure to the
 location the box was residing.  These servers were both DEC Alpha's and
 Intel-based OEM and Clone machines.

 As I said before, just as much as it is a problem for the *nix platform,
 the things that make the OS unreliable is the cheap hardware and
 sloppy device drivers that are applied to the system.  Proper
 installation, and hardening of the OS for the specific purpose it is
 supporting (read don't use the same machine you've set up as your server
 as your desktop too, installing all kinds of non-server related programs
 on it like free-ware and demos of programs found in the center or back
 of some periodical you got in the mail), and the Windows NT / 2000
 Server will be just as stable as the next implementation of Solaris on a
 Sparc station.

 And again, as Chuck pointed out, if the Applications developed to run on
 the Windows NT / 2000 platform were developed properly, than the servers
 would be reliable in that respect too.  I'm not a programmer by any
 means, but from what I've observed, you can have just as many crashes
 for building crappy DLL's as you can from improper handling/use of C
 library modules on a *nix box.  Not to mention, both types of
 programmers need to know how to program for Memory Address handling.


 But who am I to argue... the whole slamming of Windblows is probably
 just because some bull-headed *nix lackey is just pi$$ed off he can't go
 rebuild the kernel half a dozen times to tweak the system on
 Windows.

 And as a final note, I do maintain the argument that ALL of the OS's out
 there have their own place in the industry; there isn't just ONE O.S.
 that addresses all the use/needs of any particular business (keeping
 Support in mind).

 Now- Back to our regularly scheduled commentary on Cisco Studies.

 -Mark

 -Original Message-
 From: nrf [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Thursday, July 25, 2002 12:07 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

 Buggy/unreliable software is indeed the same anywhere.  But when
 combined
 with buggy/unrelia

Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2002-07-24 Thread sergei

Makes sense, - M$ products need it more...


DAve Diaz wrote:

 Remember cisco have no money just $21 Billion dollars in the bank,  so no
 new hardware for a while, no unix in a security lab that is absurb,

 Dave

 From: markh
 Reply-To: markh
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]
 Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:33:52 -0500
 
 really?
 --
 
  I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there will be no
  UNIX, only NT.
  I was there and it's true.
  
  MS
 _
 Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp.




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=49542t=17848
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Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2002-07-24 Thread Chuck

for whatever reason, Cisco and Microsoft are partnered for a lot of things.

Call Manager for *nix??? hahahahahahahahahaha

IIRC the last Cisco management software presentation, just about everything
is on NT or Win2K boxes these days.

I believe it's called Market Share - there are far more Microsoft certified
folk than *nix certified folk. Try selling AVVID when you also have to tell
a customer that he has to hire a *nix capable individual or retrain his
existing Microsoft capable people. Same for the management platform. same
for any of the security related software products.



sergei  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Makes sense, - M$ products need it more...


 DAve Diaz wrote:

  Remember cisco have no money just $21 Billion dollars in the bank,  so
no
  new hardware for a while, no unix in a security lab that is absurb,
 
  Dave
 
  From: markh
  Reply-To: markh
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]
  Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:33:52 -0500
  
  really?
  --
  
   I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there will be
no
   UNIX, only NT.
   I was there and it's true.
   
   MS
  _
  Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at
http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp.




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=49547t=17848
--
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Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2002-07-24 Thread nrf

Well, this kind of thing cuts both ways.  A reseller I know is trying to
sell AVVID and is on dangerous ground precisely because CM is on Windows and
the potential customer has had some very bad experiences with Windows
servers due to reliability issues and so forth.  The customer is deciding
whether to go with AVVID or a traditional PBX, and the fact that AVVID is so
Windows-centric is a significant minus, and in fact could be the whole basis
for losing the deal, because the customer has to know that his phone system
is going to always be up without any dithering around.  Yes, yes, you can do
things like clustering to improve the reliability of CM, but the simple fact
of the matter is that Windows has a well-founded reputation for
unreliability when compared to UNIX, and when you're talking about phone
systems, unreliability is definitely something that a potential customer
does not want to hear.  Not at all.   This is why you rarely see any vendors
of enterprise software (like DB's, ERP, CRM, SCM, etc. etc.) that don't
offer a UNIX version - because just like a phone system, these are crucial
applications that just have to reliable.

Chuck  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 for whatever reason, Cisco and Microsoft are partnered for a lot of
things.

 Call Manager for *nix??? hahahahahahahahahaha

 IIRC the last Cisco management software presentation, just about
everything
 is on NT or Win2K boxes these days.

 I believe it's called Market Share - there are far more Microsoft
certified
 folk than *nix certified folk. Try selling AVVID when you also have to
tell
 a customer that he has to hire a *nix capable individual or retrain his
 existing Microsoft capable people. Same for the management platform. same
 for any of the security related software products.



 sergei  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Makes sense, - M$ products need it more...
 
 
  DAve Diaz wrote:
 
   Remember cisco have no money just $21 Billion dollars in the bank,  so
 no
   new hardware for a while, no unix in a security lab that is absurb,
  
   Dave
  
   From: markh
   Reply-To: markh
   To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]
   Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:33:52 -0500
   
   really?
   --
   
I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there will
be
 no
UNIX, only NT.
I was there and it's true.

MS
   _
   Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at
 http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp.




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=49603t=17848
--
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Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2002-07-24 Thread Chuck

sure. ok. agreed.

OTOH, buggy / unreliable software is the same, no matter whose platform it
runs on. A long time ago in a galaxy far away I was able to successfully
crash Sun Unix boxes several times through sheer ignorance. one was in the
Sun Sys Admin training class I was taking, the rest were Sun boxes that Big
Brokerage Firm had installed in the office where I worked. Proof that there
ain't no such thing as foolproof because this here fool can break just
about anything ;-

BTW, you have just ht on the major reason for NOT doing packetized voice. Or
maybe just limiting it to toll bypass, while keeping your PBX. Sometimes I
think the only real selling point for AVVID is that is kewl  The biggest
selling points for Windows way back when were the screen savers and the
games. MCSE = Microsoft Certified Solitaire Expert


nrf  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Well, this kind of thing cuts both ways.  A reseller I know is trying to
 sell AVVID and is on dangerous ground precisely because CM is on Windows
and
 the potential customer has had some very bad experiences with Windows
 servers due to reliability issues and so forth.  The customer is deciding
 whether to go with AVVID or a traditional PBX, and the fact that AVVID is
so
 Windows-centric is a significant minus, and in fact could be the whole
basis
 for losing the deal, because the customer has to know that his phone
system
 is going to always be up without any dithering around.  Yes, yes, you can
do
 things like clustering to improve the reliability of CM, but the simple
fact
 of the matter is that Windows has a well-founded reputation for
 unreliability when compared to UNIX, and when you're talking about phone
 systems, unreliability is definitely something that a potential customer
 does not want to hear.  Not at all.   This is why you rarely see any
vendors
 of enterprise software (like DB's, ERP, CRM, SCM, etc. etc.) that don't
 offer a UNIX version - because just like a phone system, these are crucial
 applications that just have to reliable.

 Chuck  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  for whatever reason, Cisco and Microsoft are partnered for a lot of
 things.
 
  Call Manager for *nix??? hahahahahahahahahaha
 
  IIRC the last Cisco management software presentation, just about
 everything
  is on NT or Win2K boxes these days.
 
  I believe it's called Market Share - there are far more Microsoft
 certified
  folk than *nix certified folk. Try selling AVVID when you also have to
 tell
  a customer that he has to hire a *nix capable individual or retrain his
  existing Microsoft capable people. Same for the management platform.
same
  for any of the security related software products.
 
 
 
  sergei  wrote in message
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   Makes sense, - M$ products need it more...
  
  
   DAve Diaz wrote:
  
Remember cisco have no money just $21 Billion dollars in the bank,
so
  no
new hardware for a while, no unix in a security lab that is absurb,
   
Dave
   
From: markh
Reply-To: markh
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]
Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:33:52 -0500

really?
--

 I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there will
 be
  no
 UNIX, only NT.
 I was there and it's true.
 
 MS
_
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at
  http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp.




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http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=49604t=17848
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Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2002-07-24 Thread nrf

Buggy/unreliable software is indeed the same anywhere.  But when combined
with buggy/unreliable OS's, now we're talking about a solution that is
REALLY buggy and unreliable.  For example, if your software is only
guaranteed to run at 3 9's, and your OS is also only guaranteed to run at 3
9's, then overall we're talking about a less-than-3-9's of a solution.

You can actually run packetized voice very reliably, and not just for toll
bypass (although it is definitely true that toll-bypass  is the easiest and
most mature kind of packetized voice to do).  The key is that you have to
design things in  a certain way to maximize your reliability.  Many carriers
like SBC use packetized voice with soft-switch signalling in certain parts
of their network, and then you have packetized voice wholesalers like Ibasis
that have massive available voice capacity and a good reputation for
reliability.  There was a huge amount of serious talk after 9-11 for Verizon
and other carriers to contract for backup voice capacity through somebody
like Ibasis in case their voice switches got destroyed again - as during
9-11, people saw that while traditional voice service was severely affected,
packet networks like the Internet were still functioning, so in these kinds
of circumstances, you could say that packetized voice might actually be more
reliable than regular voice.But again, it takes very careful design to
achieve this kind of reliability.


Chuck  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 sure. ok. agreed.

 OTOH, buggy / unreliable software is the same, no matter whose platform it
 runs on. A long time ago in a galaxy far away I was able to successfully
 crash Sun Unix boxes several times through sheer ignorance. one was in the
 Sun Sys Admin training class I was taking, the rest were Sun boxes that
Big
 Brokerage Firm had installed in the office where I worked. Proof that
there
 ain't no such thing as foolproof because this here fool can break just
 about anything ;-

 BTW, you have just ht on the major reason for NOT doing packetized voice.
Or
 maybe just limiting it to toll bypass, while keeping your PBX. Sometimes I
 think the only real selling point for AVVID is that is kewl  The biggest
 selling points for Windows way back when were the screen savers and the
 games. MCSE = Microsoft Certified Solitaire Expert


 nrf  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Well, this kind of thing cuts both ways.  A reseller I know is trying to
  sell AVVID and is on dangerous ground precisely because CM is on Windows
 and
  the potential customer has had some very bad experiences with Windows
  servers due to reliability issues and so forth.  The customer is
deciding
  whether to go with AVVID or a traditional PBX, and the fact that AVVID
is
 so
  Windows-centric is a significant minus, and in fact could be the whole
 basis
  for losing the deal, because the customer has to know that his phone
 system
  is going to always be up without any dithering around.  Yes, yes, you
can
 do
  things like clustering to improve the reliability of CM, but the simple
 fact
  of the matter is that Windows has a well-founded reputation for
  unreliability when compared to UNIX, and when you're talking about phone
  systems, unreliability is definitely something that a potential customer
  does not want to hear.  Not at all.   This is why you rarely see any
 vendors
  of enterprise software (like DB's, ERP, CRM, SCM, etc. etc.) that don't
  offer a UNIX version - because just like a phone system, these are
crucial
  applications that just have to reliable.
 
  Chuck  wrote in message
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   for whatever reason, Cisco and Microsoft are partnered for a lot of
  things.
  
   Call Manager for *nix??? hahahahahahahahahaha
  
   IIRC the last Cisco management software presentation, just about
  everything
   is on NT or Win2K boxes these days.
  
   I believe it's called Market Share - there are far more Microsoft
  certified
   folk than *nix certified folk. Try selling AVVID when you also have to
  tell
   a customer that he has to hire a *nix capable individual or retrain
his
   existing Microsoft capable people. Same for the management platform.
 same
   for any of the security related software products.
  
  
  
   sergei  wrote in message
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Makes sense, - M$ products need it more...
   
   
DAve Diaz wrote:
   
 Remember cisco have no money just $21 Billion dollars in the bank,
 so
   no
 new hardware for a while, no unix in a security lab that is
absurb,

 Dave

 From: markh
 Reply-To: markh
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
     Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]
 Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:33:52 -0500
 
 really?
 --
 
  I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there
will
  be
   no
  UNIX, only NT.

Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2002-03-05 Thread DAve Diaz

Remember cisco have no money just $21 Billion dollars in the bank,  so no 
new hardware for a while, no unix in a security lab that is absurb,

Dave


From: markh 
Reply-To: markh 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]
Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:33:52 -0500

really?
--

 I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there will be no
 UNIX, only NT.
 I was there and it's true.
 
 MS
_
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp.




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http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=37378t=17848
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Re: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2002-03-04 Thread markh

really?
--

I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there will be no
UNIX, only NT.
I was there and it's true.

MS




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RE: CCIE Security Lab [7:17848]

2001-10-30 Thread Spoerr Mathias

I have an official statement from Cisco that says that there will be no
UNIX, only NT.
I was there and it's true.

MS




Message Posted at:
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